Title: SINGAPORE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION SEMINAR ON BIOETHICS
1SINGAPORE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION SEMINAR ON
BIOETHICS HEALTH LAW Medical Negligence (I)
Duty of Care 12 April 2001Allen Gledhill
2OUTLINE
- General Duty of Care
- Duty to Inform
- Duty to Third Parties
- Duty of Care when Off-Duty
- Duty to Refer
3GENERAL DUTY OF CARE
Pang Koi Fa v Lim Djoe Phing 1993 3 SLR 317,
per Amarjeet Singh JC, applying Caparo Industries
Plc v Dickman Ors 1990 1 AER 568 the
requirements are now three-fold, first, the test
of reasonable foreseeability must be satisfied,
second, there must exist a relationship of
proximity as between victim and tortfeasor and
third, the attachment of liability must be
considered just and reasonable...
4- Doctor/patient relationship certainly gives rise
to duty of care - - to treat
- - to inform
- Doctor/third party?
- Doctor off duty?
- Doctor who cannot do the job?
5DOCTORS DUTY TO INFORM
- Failure to inform amounts to negligence. May
also amount to battery. - Australia (Rogers v Whitaker 1992 175 CLR 479)
Canada (Reibl v Hughes 1980 114 DLR (3d) 1)
USA (Canterbury v Spence 464 F 2nd 772 1972
USCA, District of Columbia) Malaysia (Kamalam v
Eastern Plantation Agency 1996 4 MLJ 674) all
focus on the patients right to know, and the
extent of the duty is fixed by the Court.
6Principle applied in Rogers v Whitaker is as
follows- Except in the case of an emergency or
where disclosure would prove damaging to the
patient, a medical practitioner has a duty to
warn the patient of a material risk inherent in
proposed treatment. A risk is material if, in
the circumstances of the particular case, a
reasonable person in the patients position, if
warned of the risk, would be likely to attach
significance to it or if the medical practitioner
is or should reasonably be aware that the
particular patient, if warned of the risk, would
be likely to attach significance to it. The fact
that a body of reputable medical practitioners
would have given the same advice as the medical
practitioner gave does not preclude a finding of
negligence. Generally speaking, whether the
patient has been given all the relevant
information to choose between undergoing and not
undergoing the proposed treatment is not a
question the answer to which depends upon medical
standards or practice.
7- In England, the leading authority is Sidaway v
Bethlehem Royal Hospital Governors 1985 1 AC
871 643. Applied Bolam v Friern Hospital
Management Committee 1985 1 WLR 582. Per Lord
Diplock (at 895)- - The only effect that mention of risks can have
on the patients mind, if it has any at all can
be in the direction of deterring the patient from
undergoing the treatment which in the expert
opinion of the doctor it is in the patients
interest to undergo. To decide what risks the
existence of which a patient should be
voluntarily warned and the terms in which such
warning, if any, should be given, having regard
to the effect that the warning may have, is as
much an exercise of professional skill and
judgment as any other part of the doctors
comprehensive duty of care to the individual
patient, and expert medical evidence in this
matter should be treated in just the same way.
The Bolam test should be applied.
8- Bolam and Sidaway have been applied in the
Singapore High Court - - Jason Carlos Francisco v Dr LM Thng Anor
(Suit No 573 of 1998) unreported and - - Dennis Matthew Harte v Dr Tan Hun Hoe and
Gleneagles Hospital Ltd (Suit No 1691 of 1999),
unreported. - But not in the specific context of duty to
inform. - In Sidaway, the House of Lords rejected the
argument that different tests should be applied
to different aspects of doctor/patient care.
9- Singapore Courts may take different approach when
the issue of duty to inform comes up. - Preferable approach is Sidaway - any body of
professionals that declines to disclose
information because of fear of liability alone
cannot be respectable or reasonable. Such
evidence would be rejected - using the Bolam
test.
10DUTY TO THIRD PARTIES
- when patient is the third party
- nervous shock
- Sometimes, the patient is the Third Party
- - when examination conducted at the request of
employer/insurer - - social workers
- Sub nom (Minors) v Bedfordshire County Council
1995 2 WLR 152 - House of Lords decided that a psychiatrist
appointed by Social Services authority to
advise the authority on whether the child had
been a victim of sexual abuse and the likely
perpetrator did not owe a duty of care to the
child, because the imposition of such duty would
not be just and reasonable under the Caparo
test.
11- Sometimes, observing the deteriorating condition
of a close friend or relative may lead to
psychiatric illness - Pang Koi Fa v Lim Djoe Phing 1993 3 SLR 317
- Misdiagnosis by neurosurgeon. Operation to
remove tumour of pituitary gland. Healthy
tissue removed. - Patient began to leak cerebro-spinal fluid
through her nose and developed meningitis. - Ultimately passed away.
- Mother witnessed deterioration.
12- Doctor found liable to mother for negligent
infliction of psychiatric illness and ordered to
pay 30,000 damages. - This kind of liability difficult to avoid.
Cannot prevent close relatives from observing
deterioration. - Counselling and spending enough time keeping
family members updated why deterioration is
taking place is preventive of a complaint of
negligence
13- In insurance cases, the doctor is under a
duty not to damage the applicant in the course
of examination but beyond this his duties are
owed to the insurance company and not to the
applicant.
14DUTY OF CARE WHEN OFF DUTY
- Essence of the duty is voluntary assumption of
responsibility. - Makes no difference if care is given
gratuitously. - Rv Bateman 1925 LTR 730 at 732, per Lord
Hewart, CJ- - If a person holds himself out as possessing
special skill and knowledge and he is consulted,
as possessing such skill and knowledge, by or on
behalf of a patient, he owes a duty to the
patient to exercise due caution in undertaking
the treatment. - If he accepts the responsibility and undertakes
the treatment and the patient submits to his
direction and treatment accordingly, he owes a
duty to the patient to use diligence, care,
knowledge, skill and caution in administering the
treatment. No contractual relation is necessary,
nor is it necessary that the service be rendered - for reward.
15- Once responsibility is accepted, usual rules
apply. Reasonable care must be taken. - Everett v Griffith 1990 3 KB 163 at 213, per
Atkin CJ- - the duty would apply to a doctor treating a
member of the household of the other party to
the contract, as it would, in my judgment, apply
to a doctor acting gratuitously in a public
institution, or in the case of emergency in a
street accident and its existence is
independent of the volition of the patient, for
it would apply though the patient were
unconscious or incapable of exercising a
conscious volition.
16- In emergencies, reasonable care will take
into account circumstances in which doctor must
operate. - When is there a voluntary acceptance of
responsibility? - Only when the circumstances are such as to
indicate a genuine undertaking of
responsibility for the patients medical
care. - corridor consultations
- take a Panadol and sleep on it
- These would generally not qualify.
17- Doctor not obliged to keep clinic open to treat
would - be patients. - Barnett v Chelsea and Kensington Hospital
Management Committee 1969 QBD 428 at 435 - But, once there is a doctor/patient
relationship, there is a duty to attend, even
if attendance is required after hours.
18DUTY TO REFER
- Lily Pai v Dr Henry Yeo Peng Hock
- (reported in Straits Times, 29 March 2001).
- Doctor told patient she had to go to SGH
- AE Unit, but Court found that he did not
- tell her to go immediately.
- Patient did not go to the AE Unit and
- became blind in her left eye.
19- Court found doctor liable.
- Case suggests that doctors must emphasise
need for urgency and possible consequences. - Saying that the patient must go to AE does
not suggest sufficient urgency.
20- CONCLUSION
- Rules as to general duty of care are the same
for doctors as for others. - Uncertainty about duty to inform. English v
Australian position? English position preferable. - There is a duty to 3rd parties in some cases.
- Duty depends on voluntary assumption of
responsibility. - Duty extends to making references to others and
to emphasising urgency.