Health Law Update

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Health Law Update HEALTH LAW UPDATE August 2011 – Cases, News, Views & Research ADDRESS LEVEL 4, TOOWONG TOWER • Cardiotocographs – problematic for clinicians and judges 9 SHERWOOD ROAD,TOOWONG • Dr Patel, continued • Limitations of the peer professional practice defence BRISBANE, QUEENSLAND • Patient documentation AUSTRALIA • Gen-Y nurses tipping the balance of power CORRESPONDENCE PO BOX 82, TOOWONG CAUSATION AND SUSPICIOUS CTG TRACES QUEENSLAND, 4066 Case note McCoy v East Midlands Strategic Health AUSTRALIA Authority [2011] EWHC 38 (QB) This decision was delivered on 18 January 2011 by the Honourable Mrs Justice TELEPHONE Slade in the Queen’s Bench Division of the High Court of England and Wales. 07 3371 1066 BACKGROUND +61 7 3371 1066 The 17 year old claimant was born on 22 March 1993 at 39 weeks gestation in poor condition, and now suffers from diplegic cerebral palsy (a brain injury effecting contralateral limbs) and learning difficulties. Damages were claimed in clinical negligence, pursuant to section 1 of the Congenital Disabilities (Civil FACSIMILE Liability) Act 1976. 07 3371 7803 On 17 March 1993, the claimant’s mother (Ms Jones) attended Kettering General Hospital for monitoring after complaining of reduced fetal movements. +61 7 3371 7803 Ms Jones was given a cardiotocograph (‘CTG’) scan by Dr Lukshumeyah (‘a Staff Grade Obstetrician’), who later concluded the CTG trace was ‘satisfactory’, and sent Ms Jones home with a kick chart to record fetal movements. E-MAIL The claimant contended that Dr Lukshumeyah negligently interpreted the CTG scan. It was argued that as a result of Dr Lukshumeyah’s ‘satisfactory’ finding, [email protected] no further scans were undertaken, which would have likely shown a similar or worse fetal heart pattern, an indication of hypoxia. As a result of a repeated suspicious scan, steps would have been taken to bring about early delivery on In association with 18 March 1993, which would have prevented the claimant suffering brain damage. McCabe Terrill Lawyers Sydney & Melbourne The medical experts agreed that the damage to the claimant was caused by chronic partial hypoxia, which was the result of placental failure. They also agreed that the claimant was undamaged on 17 March 1993, and that the damage was highly unlikely to have occurred prior to 18 March 1993. Page 1 – HBM Lawyers Health Law Update – August 2011 Liability limited by a scheme approved under professional standards legislation PRINCIPAL ISSUE Mr Jarvis (obstetrician) stated that a failure to recognise the potential seriousness of the The principle issues which the Court had to abnormalities on the CTG fell below the standard address included: to be expected in the circumstances. He argued that it was not acceptable to allow Ms Jones to (1) What were the relevant features of the CTG return home without further assessment, namely trace, in particular, how many and at what time conducting an additional CTG, with delivery of were decelerations shown? the baby if there was any deterioration. In contrast, Mr Porter (obstetrician) believed that (2) Did Dr Lukshumeyah act negligently in the accelerations present in the trace would lead categorising the CTG trace as ‘satisfactory’? the reasonable obstetrician to find the CTG reassuring, and it was therefore acceptable for (3) Had a further scan been performed on 17 Dr Lukshumeyah to send Ms Jones home. March 1993, on the balance of probabilities would it have led to delivery before hypoxia However, given that the heart rate was caused brain damage? decreasing at the end of the scan, both experts agreed that Dr Lukshumeyah should have DECISION continued the C TG for a longer period of time. Dr Lukshumeyah admitted in hindsight it was The Court found that Dr Lukshumeyah was unreasonable not to repeat the trace in the negligent in his failure to carry out a further CTG circumstances. scan on Ms Jones on 17 March 1993. However, the medical evidence showed that the damage The Court looked to the legal tests for suffered by the claimant was most likely to have establishing medical negligence as recognised in occurred between 24 and 48 hours before the Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee claimant’s birth on 22 March 1993. [1957] 1 WLR 582, 586, and Bolitho v City of Consequently, it was unlikely that a further scan Hackney Health Authority [1998] AC 232 , 241. on 17 March 1993 would have been suspicious This test states that ‘a clinician (of any discipline) as to lead her obstetrician to deliver her is not to be adjudged negligent if he has acted in prematurely on the 18 March 1993. As such, the a way considered reasonable by a reasonable claimant was unable to establish that but for the body of his peers, provided always that the doctor’s failure to carry out a further scan on 17 thinking that underpins his actions bears logical March 1993 she would not have suffered brain scrutiny’. damage. The claim was dismissed. Justice Slade applied the Bolam/Bolitiho test and REASONING found that, based on the medical evidence, Dr Lukshumeyah acted negligently in describing the Medical evidence was provided to help explain trace as ‘satisfactory’ and in failing to re-start the the CTG scan, and the relevance of any CTG or admit Ms Jones for further scans on 17 decelerations. Upon examining the scan, both March 1993. experts (Mr Jarvis and Mr Porter) agreed that the baseline heart rate was satisfactory. Further, The Court then had to determine whether Dr they accepted the definition of a deceleration in Lukshumeyah’s negligence resulted in the heat rate as being ‘one of more than 15 claimant suffering brain damage. The Court (beats/minute ) lasting for more than 15 seconds’. needed to determine whether a further trace on Two such decelerations were found in the trace 17 March 1993 was likely to have been on Ms Jones on 17 March 1993; one lasting 30 suspicious, or worse than the first. It was agreed seconds, and the other lasting at least 15 that if the further trace had been properly seconds. Four accelerations were also regarded as normal no action to deliver the baby identified. early would have been taken. In determining whether Dr Lukshumeyah was Justice Slade found, on the balance of negligent in his interpretation of the CTG, the probabilities that as the claimant most likely Court looked to what could constitute a normal suffered the damage 24 to 48 hours before her CTG scan in the circumstances. A normal trace birth, it was not established that a second or was defined as one with a baseline of 120 to 160 resumed CTG on 17 March 1993 would have beats/minute with a variability of 5 to 25 been suspicious so as to lead her doctor to beats/minute, with at least 2 accelerations with deliver her on 18 March 1993. As such, the an amplitude of 10 to 15 beats/minute over a 15 claimant was not able to establish that the to 20 minute interval. There should be no negligence of Dr Lukshumeyah was the cause of decelerations, except for the occasional sporadic the damage suffered by her. The claim was mild variety. therefore dismissed. Page 2 – HBM Lawyers Health Law Update – August 2011 Liability limited by a scheme approved under professional standards legislation accordance with that management, and also to things which are not done as a result of a decision which is deliberately taken with regard to the management of the patient’ (at 154). APPEAL BY DR PATEL The Court of Appeal accepted the Royston Cook R v Patel; ex parte A-G (Qld) [2011] definition. It was stated that treatment is not QCA 81 confined to acts which occurred after the commencement of surgery. The appellant’s BACKGROUND conduct in proceeding to perform an operation amounted to the administration of surgical Earlier editions of Health Law Update have treatment to each patient. The trial Judge discussed this high profile prosecution and concluded that the duty imposed by section 288 appeal. On 29 June 2010, Dr Jayant Patel applied both in relation to surgery performed in a (appellant) was found guilty of 4 counts of criminally negligent manner, and in relation to manslaughter and one count of grievous bodily surgery that should not have been performed at harm. The charges arose as a result of surgery all. Undertaking to perform it was, in itself, performed by the appellant whilst employed at criminally negligent. Bundaberg Hospital between May 2003 and December 2004. He was sentenced to 7 years The Court of Appeal highlighted that the for each manslaughter charge and 3 years for interpretation of section 288 put forward by the the offence of grievous bodily harm, to be served appellant would have surprising, and concurrently. inappropriate, results. For example, section 288 would then not apply in relation to a surgeon who GROUNDS OF APPEAL conducted a technically competent operation to remove a patient’s lung, but the surgeon had, by Section 288 Criminal Code 1889 (Qld) criminal negligence, misdiagnosed the patient’s cold as lung cancer. Or, where a surgeon The decision was appealed on a number of proceeded with a technically competent grounds, including whether section 288 of the operation to which a patient consented, despite Criminal Code 1889 (Qld) was properly having formed the opinion during the operation interpreted by the trial Judge. The appellant that it was unnecessary or useless. argued that section 288 only applies in relation to the absence of skill or the failure to use The Court emphasised that the rule that statutes reasonable care in the course of surgery, and it creating offences should be strictly construed does not apply in relation to a surgeon’s decision applies only where the statute remains doubtful to operate or recommend surgery.
Recommended publications
  • Surgical News May 2013 / Page 3
    Surgicalthe royaL a ustraLasian News CoLLege of surgeons May 2013 Vol: 12 No:10 The Golden Nov/Dec Scalpel games 2011 - a test of surgical skill Value of the Audit Improving patient outcomes The College of Surgeons of Australia and New Zealand c ntents 10 Alcohol-fuelled violence Why we need to talk about it 16 Global Burden of Surgical Disease How surgeons can advance the agenda 18 A test of skill Medics compete in surgical battle of skills 22 Medico-Legal The ongoing saga of Jayant Patel 12 6 Relationships & Advocacy 22 Your Practice Card 8 Surgical Snips A new web facility for 14 Poison’d Chalice members 17 Dr BB G-loved 28 PD Workshops 25 International 33 Case Note Review Development 37 Curmudgeon’s Corner Continuing a vision in the 46 Book Club Pacific 26 Successful Scholar Ajay Iyengar’s research UpToDate® with heart To learn more or to 32 Morbidity Audit and Logbook Tool subscribe risk-free, visit This key tool continues learn.uptodate.com/UTD improvement for Fellows Or call +1-781-392-2000. Patients don’t just expect you to have all the right answers. 18 34 They expect you to have them right now. Fortunately, there’s SurgicalTHE ROYAL AUSTRALASIAN News COLLEGE OF SURGEONS MAY 2013 Vol: 12 No:10 UpToDate, the only reliable clinical resource that anticipates your The Golden Nov/Dec Correspondence to Surgical News should be sent to: Scalpel games 2011 - a test of surgical skill questions, then helps you find accurate answers quickly – often in [email protected] Letters to the Editor should be sent to: [email protected] the time it takes to go from one patient to another.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of the Failed Employee Voice System at the Bundaberg Hospital
    Fatal consequences: an analysis of the failed employee voice system at the Bundaberg Hospital Author Wilkinson, Adrian, Townsend, Keith, Graham, Tina, Muurlink, Olav Published 2015 Journal Title Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources Version Accepted Manuscript (AM) DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12061 Copyright Statement © 2015 Australian Human Resources Institute. This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Fatal consequences: an analysis of the failed employee voice system at the Bundaberg Hospital, Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources, Volume 53, Issue 3, pages 265–280, 2015 which has been published in final form at http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12061. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving (http://olabout.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-828039.html) Downloaded from http://hdl.handle.net/10072/157963 Griffith Research Online https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au Fatal Consequences: An analysis of the failed employee voice system at the Bundaberg Hospital ABSTRACT In this paper we discuss the failure of the employee voice system at the Bundaberg Base Hospital (BBH) in Australia. Surgeon Jayant Patel who was arrested over the deaths of patients on whom he operated when he was the Director of Surgery at the Hospital. Our interest is in the reasons the established employee voice mechanisms failed when employees attempted to bring to the attention of managers serious issues. Our data is based on an analysis of the sworn testimonies of participants who participated in two inquiries concerning these events. An analysis of the events with a particular focus on the failings of the voice system is presented.
    [Show full text]
  • The Whistleno. 68, October 2011
    “All that is needed for evil to prosper is for people of good will to do nothing”—Edmund Burke The Whistle No. 68, October 2011 Newsletter of Whistleblowers Australia “As part of my treatment, I need a nurse with a whistle.” Media watch O’Farrell steps in “I conclude that the justice of the Top court backs case requires that the state, the suc- for whistleblower cessful party, be entitled to its costs,” whistleblowers Britt Smith and Adam Bennett he said. Alexander Bratersky Australian Associated Press Ms Sneddon told the media she was Moscow Times, 1 July 2011 3 August 2011 facing the prospect of severe financial hardship because of the decision. The Constitutional Court on Thursday THE whistleblower in the Milton “It was supposed to be compensa- ruled that state employees cannot be Orkopoulos child sex case won’t have tion. How does that compensate what I punished for engaging in whistle- to pay the state’s legal costs after NSW have gone through, that I could be on blowing activities against their superi- Premier Barry O’Farrell stepped in to medication for life,” she told Fairfax ors. The court based its ruling on the save the woman he calls a “hero.” Radio Network. case of two state employees, a police Mr O’Farrell announced the bailout Then came the surprise twist. Mr officer and tax inspector, who both for Gillian Sneddon hours after a NSW O’Farrell announced just before 3pm were fired for criticizing their bosses. Supreme Court judge ruled against her to parliament that the state would pick “A state employee might express his in the costs decision on Wednesday.
    [Show full text]
  • Victoria's Legislative Council Inquires
    STICKING UP FOR VICTORIA? — VICTORIA’S LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL INQUIRES INTO THE PERFORMANCE OF THE AUSTRALIAN HEALTH PRACTITIONER REGULATION AGENCY DR GABRIELLE WOLF* This article analyses the report of the Victorian Legislative Council’s Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee (‘Committee’) from its Inquiry into the Performance of the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA). AHPRA is a national body that provides administrative support for the National Registration and Accreditation Scheme (NRAS), under which practitioners in 14 health professions across Australia are regulated. The article considers the Committee’s fi ndings and recommendations in light of the impetuses for the creation of the NRAS, as well as the structure and implementation of the NRAS and AHPRA. It is argued that that the value of the Committee’s report is confi ned to its identifi cation of important issues concerning the NRAS and AHPRA that, in the near future, will require a more critical and comprehensive investigation than the Committee undertook. I INTRODUCTION Two scandals in the fi rst years of the 21stt century eroded Australians’ confi dence in their system of regulating health practitioners. Dr Graeme Reeves and Dr Jayant Patel were charged with committing heinous crimes against patients while they were employed in hospitals and registered as medical practitioners by the Medical Boards of New South Wales and Queensland respectively. The only charges ultimately sustained against Patel related to his fraudulent representations to his registration body. Nevertheless, public outrage and government alarm in response to the original charges against Patel and to the events surrounding Reeves led to several inquiries into the cracks in the health system through which these practitioners had fallen.
    [Show full text]
  • It / /Ja Member: 1
    Paper No.: Date: it / /ja Member: 1 abled Tabled, by leave 23 June 2010 Incorporated, Remainder incorporated, by leave by leave Clerk at the Table: Mr Martin Moynihan Chairman Crime and Misconduct Commission GPO Box 3123 BRISBANE Q 4001 Dear Mr Moynihan, Rob Messenger MP MEMBER FOR B URNETT On behalf of my staff, myself and the people of the Burnett, I congratulate you on your public comments and the CMC Review of the June 2010 Queensland Police Service's Palm Island Review. You have given renewed hope to the people of Queensland that the CMC will become a fearless and impartial force against crime and misconduct, wherever it may be found. I note that as the head of the CMC, as reported by Madonna King in the Courier-Mail June 19, 2010.. CMG won't be palmed off "under the Police Service Administration Act 1990, the CIVIC has to also agree to both the appointment and the conditions on which the appointment is made" And therefore quite obviously, you have a very important role to play in the appointment of the Queensland Police Commissioner. In order to assist you to make that decision fully informed, and specifically on behalf of former patients of Jayent Patel and others, I'd like to draw to your attention the behavior of the QLD Police Service lead Strop 7Bargara Beacli -Plaza by Police Commissioner Atkinson, with regard to an employee of 15-19 See Street Queensland Health Dr Darren Keating. (PO Box 8371) Bargara Q1d4670 Dr Darren Keating you will remember, was employed by the Queensland Government, as the Director of Medical Services at the Bundaberg Base Freecall No.
    [Show full text]
  • Legislative Council
    8037 LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL Wednesday 4 June 2008 __________ The President (The Hon. Peter Thomas Primrose) took the chair at 11.00 a.m. The President read the Prayers. ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND ASSESSMENT AMENDMENT BILL 2008 BUILDING PROFESSIONALS AMENDMENT BILL 2008 STRATA MANAGEMENT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2008 Bills received, and read a first time and ordered to be printed on motion by the Hon. Tony Kelly, on behalf of the Hon. Michael Costa. Motion by The Hon. Tony Kelly agreed to: That standing orders be suspended to allow the passing of the bills through all their remaining stages during the present or any one sitting of the House. Second reading set down as an order of the day for a later hour. CHINA EARTHQUAKE Motion by Reverend the Hon. Fred Nile agreed to: That this House: (a) recognises the human tragedy that is unfolding in the People's Republic of China, (b) expresses its sympathies to the victims of the earthquake in Sichuan Province, China, and (c) calls on State and Federal governments to offer, where practical, all available assistance to those suffering as a result of this disaster. STANDING COMMITTEE ON STATE DEVELOPMENT Government Response to Report The Hon. John Della Bosca tabled the Government's response to report No. 32, entitled "Aspects of Agriculture", dated 28 November 2007. Ordered to be printed on motion by the Hon. John Della Bosca. UNPROCLAIMED LEGISLATION The Hon. Eric Roozendaal tabled a list detailing all legislation unproclaimed 90 calendar days after assent as at 3 June 2008. PETITIONS Cooma Hospital Kidney Dialysis Service Petition requesting the provision of a kidney dialysis service for patients in the Cooma region, received from the Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • Queensland July to December 2005
    304 Political Chronicles Queensland July to December 2005 PAUL D. WILLIAMS Grth University Observers of Queensland politics could be forgiven for thinking only one issue occupied the state's public sphere in the latter half of 2005: the management (or mismanagement) of health policy. Indeed, the allegations that an allegedly negligent, overseas-trained surgeon caused numerous patient deaths at Bundaberg Hospital (first raised in April 2005 — see previous chronicle) were so convulsive in their effect on the public mood that we may remember 2005's "Dr Death" saga as the principal turning point downwards in the electoral fortunes of Premier Peter Beattie. Moreover, damaging accusations of a "culture" of secrecy within Queensland Health that obfuscated evidence of malpractice directly or indirectly spawned a series of significant events, including four inquiries (of which three were judicial), a ministerial dismissal, two lost by-elections, a reformed Liberal-National coalition and, of course, a collapse in the government's and the Premier's public opinion leads. The Economy The state of the Queensland economy, while generally good, was perhaps less sanguine than many had hoped. While unemployment mid-year stood at just 3.9 per cent, then the second lowest in the nation (Courier- Mail, 8 July 2006), by year's close it once again had climbed toward 5 per cent (http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/mf/6202.0) . Inflation, too, proved challenging, with the consumer price index increasing 0.8 percentage points in the December quarter (http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/ abs%40.nsf/mf/6401.0).
    [Show full text]
  • Bundaberg Hospital Commission of Inquiry Interim Report of 10 June
    Bundaberg Hospital Commission of Inquiry Interim Report of 10 June, 2005 Commissioner: Anthony Morris QC Deputy Commissioners: Sir Llewellyn Edwards AC, Margaret Vider RN Counsel Assisting: David Andrews SC, Errol Morzone, Damien Atkinson Secretary: David Groth Level 9, Brisbane Magistrates Court, 363 George Street, Brisbane Qld 4000 PO Box 13147, George Street Qld 4003 Telephone: 07 3109 9150 Facsimile: 07 3109 9151 Email: [email protected] Website: www.bhci.qld.gov.au BUNDABERG HOSPITAL COMMISSION OF INQUIRY - IN TERIM REPORT OF 10 JUNE, 2005 – PAGE 2 OF 43 PAGES SCOPE OF THIS INTERIM REPORT 1. This Interim Report is made pursuant to section 31 of the Commissions of Inquiry Act 1950, which provides: A commission may, at the discretion of the chairperson, make any separate reports, whether interim or final, and any separate recommendations concerning any of the subject matters of its inquiry. 2. The purpose of this Interim Report is solely to bring to the attention of the Governor in Council, through the Honourable the Premier and Minister for Trade, in accordance with the Terms of Reference (“ToR”), matters which have come to the attention of the Commission during the course of evidence in the period of 2 weeks commencing 23 May 2005, with reference to: 2.1 recommended legislative changes in relation to the Medical Practitioners Registration Act 2001 (“the Registration Act”); 2.2 recommended administrative changes regarding the process for declaring “areas of need” under section 135 of the Registration Act; and 2.3 potential grounds for the prosecution of JAYANT MUKUNDRAY PATEL (“Patel”) for certain offences under the Criminal Code in connection with his registration as a medical practitioner by the Medical Board of Queensland (“the Board”) under the Registration Act, his employment at the Bundaberg Base Hospital (“BBH”), and surgery performed by him at BBH.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Politics of Ignorance in Nursing and Healthcare
    Downloaded by [New York University] at 09:35 13 September 2016 On the Politics of Ignorance in Nursing and Healthcare Ignorance is mostly framed as a void, a gap to be filled with appropriate knowledge. In nursing and healthcare, concerns about ignorance fuel searches for knowledge expected to bring certainty to care provision, preventing risk, accidents or mistakes. This unique volume turns the focus on ignorance as something productive in itself, and works to understand how ignorance and its operations shape what we do and do not know. Focusing explicitly on nursing practice and its organisation within con- temporary health settings, Amélie Perron and Trudy Rudge draw on con- temporary interdisciplinary debates to discuss social processes informed by ignorance, ignorance’s temporal and spatial boundaries, and how ignorance defines what can be known by specific groups with differential access to power and social status. Using feminist, postcolonial and historical analyses, this book challenges dominant conceptualisations and discusses a range of ‘non- knowledges’ in nursing and health work, including uncertainty, abjection, denial, deceit and taboo. It also explores the way dominant research and managerial practices perpetuate ignorance in healthcare organisations. In health contexts, productive forms of ignorance can help to future-proof understandings about the management of healthy/sick bodies and those caring for them. Linking these considerations to nurses’ approaches to chal- lenges in practice, this book helps to unpack the power situated in the use of ignorance, and pays special attention to what is safe or unsafe to know, from both individual and organisational perspectives. On the Politics of Ignorance in Nursing and Healthcare is an innovative Downloaded by [New York University] at 09:35 13 September 2016 read for all students and researchers in nursing and the health sciences inter- ested in understanding more about transactions between epistemologies, knowledge-building practices and research in the health domain.
    [Show full text]
  • Factors in the Bundaberg Base Hospital Surgical
    73 Harvey K and Faunce T “A Critical Analysis of Overseas-Trained Doctor (OTD) Factors in the Bundaberg Base Hospital Surgical Inquiry” in Freckelton I (ed) Regulating Health Practitioners, Law in Context Series Federation Press Sydney 2006; 23(2):73-91 A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF OVERSEAS-TRAINED DOCTOR (“OTD”) FACTORS IN THE BUNDABERG BASE HOSPITAL SURGICAL INQUIRY KARINA HARVEY* and THOMAS FAUNCE** *BA/LLB (Hons), Legal Officer, Australian Government Attorney-General’s Department ** BA/LLB (Hons) BMed PhD, Senior Lecturer Law Faculty and Medical School Australian National University Abstract This article explores one of the most intriguing and hitherto largely unexplored aspects of healthcare quality and safety investigations in Australia: the role of a protagonist’s status as an overseas-trained doctor (“OTD”). The topic is controversial, not the least because of the growing importance of OTDs in maintaining basic health services in some areas of Australia, but also due to the difficulty of teasing genuine quality and safety problems in this context from possible racial or xenophobic concerns. As a case study, we will explore the problems associated with Dr Jayant Patel at the Bundaberg Base Hospital (“BBH”) in Queensland. The article concludes by making recommendations for improving healthcare quality and safety in this area. Introduction: the Australian Public Health System’s Increasing Dependence on OTDs This article explores one of the most intriguing and hitherto largely unexplored aspects of healthcare quality and safety investigations in Australia: the role of a protagonist’s status as an overseas-trained doctor (“OTD”). It commences with an exploration of some of the regulatory problems associated with the increasing use of OTDs to provide basic health 74 services in some areas of Australia.
    [Show full text]
  • Healthier Decision Making for Healthier Hospital on Queensland…
    COVER SHEET This is the author-version of article published as: Casali, Gian Luca (2006) Towards Healthier Decision Making: A call for a multi criteria approach. In Cohen, Stephen, Eds. Proceedings 13th Conference Australian Association for Professional & Applied Ethics (AAPAE), University of New South Wales (Sydney, Australia). Copyright 2006 (please consult author) Accessed from http://eprints.qut.edu.au Towards Healthier Decision Making: A call for a multi criteria approach Keywords: Business Ethics, Decision Making, Organizational Culture, Hospitals Abstract Recently, the pages of the newspapers have been filled with many disturbing headlines about the health sector crisis, and especially professional staff working at the public hospitals. The scandal of Dr Patel at the Bundaberg Hospital and the unqualified Russian refugee who posed as a psychiatrist and treated more then 250 mental patients are only a few examples of a Health sector with significant problems. In order to cure the current situation of the Health sector, more is required than just changing a few senior managers as “scapegoats”. There is therefore a vital need for a more ethical approach to decision making at all levels of the organization. In this atmosphere of uncertainty and unhappiness in relation to the Health sector, decision makers in the health sector need a decision making tool that would assist them in making more ethical decisions. In order to meet that need a multi criteria framework for decision makers that combines a variety of ethical principles has been developed. This paper refers to that ethical multi criteria framework as “Healthier Decision”, and it incorporates ideologies derived from four schools of moral philosophies such as Egoism, Utilitarian, Virtue Ethics and Deontology.
    [Show full text]
  • Dr Death: a Tale of Two Countries
    DR DEATH: A TALE OF TWO COUNTRIES 26 MAY 2017 | HEALTH SECTOR Both Australia and England have had their high-profile ‘Dr Deaths’ and have had to come to terms with how medically trained men, who were supposed to have dedicated their lives to saving others, were able to get away with gross incompetence and even murder. IN AUSTRALIA Dr Jayant Patel of Bundaberg Base Hospital acquired the moniker ‘Dr Death’ in the Australian press in 2005 following the exposure of a number of patient deaths under his watch. Dr Patel had been medically trained in India. He later moved to the USA and undertook further surgical training. He had been practicing in New York State from 1984 but had his license withdrawn in 2001. He then moved to Oregon where he was also subject to medical board scrutiny. His practise was restricted statewide after a number of deaths. Despite this, and the fact that he had no formal surgical qualifications, Dr Patel took up post in 2003 as Director of Surgery at the Bundaberg Base Hospital. The hospital was in an ‘area of need’, meaning that overseas-trained doctors were actively welcomed. Despite his practise restrictions in Oregon he was able to provide glowing references from his colleagues there. Over the next two years, 97 deaths were linked to Dr Patel and 30 patients died while directly under his care. He was convicted of the manslaughter of three patients but the conviction was later quashed by the High Court. He was permanently barred from practising medicine in Australia in 2015.
    [Show full text]