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CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE

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Title: THE HEALTH ACT 1999 Subject: Presentation July 2000 Author: Viv Harpwood Last modified by: Vivienne Harpwood Created Date: 6/26/2000 11:45:24 AM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE


1
CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE
  • Professor Vivienne Harpwood

2
OUTLINE
  • Brief summary of the basic law
  • Focus on problem areas
  • Analysis of the recent developments
  • Case study Bolam and Bolitho cases
  • The impact of NHS changes
  • Analysis of case scenarios

3
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
  • CLAIMANT MUST PROVE
  • Duty of care owed
  • Breach of duty
  • Damage caused by that breach

4
Is there a duty of care?
  • In most healthcare situations this has been
    established by precedent.
  • If no precedent exists the court must decide

5
THE TEST FOR ESTABLISHING A NEW DUTY
  • Foresight
  • Proximity
  • Is it fair just and reasonable to impose a duty?

6
JUDICIAL POLICY
  • The use of the word policy indicates that the
    court must decide not simply whether there is or
    is not a duty, but whether there should or should
    not be one, taking into account both the
    established framework of the law and also the
    implications that a decision one way or the other
    may have for the operation of the law in our
    society. Winfield

7
POLICY CONSIDERATIONS
  • Economic considerations
  • Justice moral and ethical issues
  • Practical implications
  • Insurance
  • Loss allocation
  • Floodgates fear of too rapid an expansion
  • Protection of classes of individuals

8
THE HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 1998
  • It is unlawful for public bodies to act in a way
    which is incompatible with a Convention right.

9
THE HUMAN RIGHTS ACT
  • Public Authorities must act in accordance with
    Convention rights
  • Courts
  • The Government
  • The GMC
  • NHS Trusts
  • NICE and Healthcare Commission

10
CONVENTION RIGHTS AND MEDICAL LAW
  • The right to life (Article 2)
  • The prohibition of inhuman and degrading
    treatment and torture (Article 3)
  • The right to liberty and security (Article 5)
  • The right to a fair trial (Article 6)

11
CONVENTION RIGHTS (continued)
  • The right to respect for privacy and family life
    (Article 8)
  • The right to receive and impart information
    (Article 10)
  • The right to marry and found a family (Article
    12)
  • The right not to be discriminated against
    (Article 14)

12
IMPACT OF HRA ON CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE
  • An end to blanket immunities for public
  • authorities
  • New routes for claiming damages Savage and
    Rabone cases

13
Article 6 of the Convention
  • In determination of his civil rights and
    obligations, or of any criminal charge against
    him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public
    hearing within a reasonable time by an
    independent and impartial tribunal

14
DUTY OF CARE GREY AREAS
  • Good Samaritan acts
  • Members of an indeterminate class
  • Wrongful life
  • Police, ambulance and other emergency services
  • Psychiatric injury secondary victims

15
GOOD SAMARITAN ACTS
  • Doctors are increasingly reluctant to give
    medical assistance on aircraft for fear of being
    sued if things go wrong.
  • 1000 incidents a week.
  • There is a steady fall in the percentage of
    occasions when a doctor or healthcare
    professional responds to a crew announcement
    seeking a volunteer".
  • (BMJ Report 2004)

16
BREACH OF DUTY 1
  • General law of negligence the standard of care
    is that of the reasonable person
  • Clinical negligence the standard of care is
    that of the reasonable healthcare professional at
    the same level and with the same qualifications

17
BREACH OF DUTY 2
  • The Bolam Test/Defence
  • A doctor is not guilty of negligence if he acted
    in accordance with a practice accepted as proper
    by a responsible body of medical opinion.A
    doctor is not negligent if he is acting in
    accordance with such a practice merely because
    there is a body of opinion that takes a contrary
    view

18
Later applications
  • Whitehouse v Jordan 1980
  • Maynard v West Midlands RHA 1984
  • I have to say that a judges preference for one
    body of distinguished opinion over another also
    professionally distinguished is not sufficient to
    establish negligence

19
Criticisms of Bolam Test
  • Too protective of doctors
  • Judges not permitted to choose between competing
    expert views
  • Responsible body not defined
  • A sociological rather then a normative framework

20
CAUSATION
  • The claimant must prove that the breach of duty
    caused or substantially contributed to the damage
    suffered.

21
Science and Law
  • Scientific proof 95 probability
  • Legal proof 51 probability a balance of
    probabilities

22
Causation in clinical negligence
  • Patients often already sick
  • Several different possible causes of illness
  • Recollections of staff and patients seldom
    coincide
  • Staff may be in conflict
  • Medical records often incomplete
  • Dependence on medical experts

23
Tests to establish causation
  • But for test
  • The chain of causation test
  • Was there a novus actus interveniens?
  • The material contribution test

24
Complex Cases
  • Omissions
  • Multiple defendants
  • Consent
  • Loss of a chance

25
Remoteness of damage
  • The defendant is only liable for damage that is
    of a type which is reasonably foreseeable
  • The courts define the extent of damage
  • The thin skull rule

26
SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT BOLITHO
  • What were the facts of the case?
  • What were the issues for the court to decide?
  • Whose evidence as to the facts (what had
    happened) did the trial judge prefer and why?
  • Was there a breach of duty in this case?
  • If so, what form would it have taken?
  • What was the main issue on causation for the
    judge to decide?

27
Bolitho questions continued
  • Could anything have been done short of intubation
    to avoid the injury to the child?
  • How many expert witnesses were there and what
    were their fields of expertise?
  • Which experts did the judge prefer and why?
  • What was the claimants theory about what had
    happened?
  • What was the defendants theory?

28
Bolitho continued
  • What test had the trial judge applied to
    determine the standard of care?
  • Did the Court of Appeal agree with the trial
    judge?
  • Does the Bolam test or something like it apply to
    causation?
  • What cases support the view that there might be
    negligence even if a body of opinion exists to
    support the defendant?

29
Bolitho continued
  • What was the new/modified test laid down by the
    House of Lords?
  • Has this new test made a difference in practice?

30
THE BOLITHO TEST
  • The judge is permitted to choose between two
    conflicting expert opinions and can reject one of
    those opinions if it is not logically
    defensible.

31
BOLITHO CLINICAL GOVERNANCE
  • Bleeps
  • Systems
  • Record keeping
  • Medical back-up
  • Court recognition of risks and benefits
  • Application to law on consent Pearce v Bristol
    United HC Trust 1998

32
SOLUTIONS TO CLINICAL NEGLIGENCE PROBLEM
  • The development of the Bolitho principle
  • The use of guidelines to define standards
  • Legal reforms
  • Contributory negligence defence
  • More radical solutions

33
The Compensation Act 2006
  • 1 Deterrent effect of potential liability
  • A court considering a claim in negligence or
    breach of statutory duty may, in determining
    whether the defendant should have taken
    particular steps to meet a standard of care
    (whether by taking precautions against a risk or
    otherwise), have regard to whether a requirement
    to take those steps might
  • (a)prevent a desirable activity from being
    undertaken at all, to a particular extent or in a
    particular way, or
  • (b)discourage persons from undertaking functions
    in connection with a desirable activity.

34
(Continued)
  • 2 Apologies, offers of treatment or other
    redress
  • An apology, an offer of treatment or other
    redress, shall not of itself amount to an
    admission of negligence or breach of statutory
    duty.

35
Can Guidelines set the standard?
  • Definitional problems
  • Too many guidelines
  • Conflicting guidance
  • Difficult to establish place in hierarchy
  • Objections from medical profession
  • Difficult to enforce

36
CLINICAL GOVERNANCE
  • A framework through which NHS bodies are
    accountable for continuously improving the
    quality of their services and safeguarding high
    standards of care, by creating an environment in
    which excellence in clinical care will flourish
  • A first class service Quality in the New NHS

37
MAIN REQUIREMENTS
  • Clear lines of accountability
  • Implementation of comprehensive programmes to
    improve quality using evidence-based guidelines,
    compulsory audit and monitoring
  • Establishing risk management policies to identify
    and remedy poor performance

38
THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CLINICAL
EXCELLENCE
  • THREE MAIN FUNCTIONS
  • Appraises and develops new and existing
    technologies
  • Commissions and disseminates clinical guidelines
  • Promotes clinical audit and Confidential Inquiries

39
NICE Guidelines
  • Official status close to the top of the hierarchy
  • Disseminated throughout the NHS
  • Must be implemented
  • Will be monitored regularly by the Healthcare
    Commission
  • Will provide a normative basis to measure the
    standard of care in negligence cases

40
Experts views
  • If guidelines have been produced by a respected
    body and have been accepted by a large part of
    the profession, a doctor would have to have
    strong reasons for not following that guidance
  • Dr Graham Burt of the MDU 1993

41
Scottish Office Advice
  • With the increasing use of guidelines in
    clinical practice, they will probably be used to
    an increasing extent to resolve questions of
    liability. Those who draft, use and monitor
    guidelines should be aware of these legal
    implications.
  • (1995)

42
OFFICIAL VIEW
  • Nice guidelines are likely to constitute a
    responsible body of medical opinion for the
    purposes of litigation
  • Doctors are advised to record their reasons for
    deviating from guidelines- Sir Michael Rawlins
  • A deviation may not be regarded as logically
    defensible

43
Sir Michael Rawlins 2003
  • I always urge doctors when they depart from a
    NICE guideline to record in the patients notes
    at the time why they did so, because there is a
    general legal view that NICE guidelines will
    replace the Bolam test in medical negligence
  • MedEconomics 2003

44
A FINAL THOUGHT
  • There are very few professional men who will
    assert that they have never fallen below the high
    standards rightly expected of them. That they
    have never been negligent..What distinguishes Mr
    Jordan from his professional colleagues is not
    that on one isolated occasion his knowledge and
    skill deserted him, but that damage resulted
  • Lord Donaldson in Whitehouse v Jordan.
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