Clinical negligence litigation – Is there a better way?

P. Walsh
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

For decades, people have been decrying the huge financial cost – not to mention the far greater human cost – that clinical negligence litigation has for the NHS. As a charity that works both for patient safety as well as access to justice, AvMA has also long argued that there has been a long-standing failure to learn lessons for improving patient safety from litigation. There is precious little evidence of this happening on any significant scale. With ever-increasing financial pressures affecting the NHS, a number of new approaches to dealing with clinical negligence are being proposed across the United Kingdom. The Scottish Government have been consulting on how they plan to move forward following years of pontification over the recommendations of an expert advisory group for a ‘no-fault compensation’ scheme. What they have come up with are proposals for a so-called ‘no-blame redress scheme’. While on first sight the proposals are not as sweeping as the original, they are quite radical. The proposed scheme would apply to ‘claims’ of under £100,000 value, which is about 70% of existing claims in Scotland. Its most radical aspect is that, as well as not requiring litigation to gain compensation, the eligibility criteria are based on ‘avoidability’ and ‘reasonable’ treatment. The scheme would provide ‘compensation quickly and fairly where . . . the harm would have been avoided by the use of reasonable care’. So far, so good. There are many advantages to using the ‘avoidability test’. It should mean that more people qualify for redress than would do under the legal test of medical negligence. It means you don’t need to point the finger of blame and pin ‘negligence’ on an individual, and it is more in tune with patient safety – looking at root causes, system failures and how such incidents can be prevented. However, the consultation document is very lacking in detail. Depending on that detail, it could be a radically different approach which is better for patients and for patient safety or it could be a disaster. More certainly is needed over the meaning of ‘reasonable’ care. There is no mention of independent legal advice for patients. It is proposed that the scheme is not independent. In fact it is administered by the very organisation that currently defends claims against the NHS in Scotland – the Central Legal Office. Worse still, a nasty surprise with huge implications for medical negligence victims with larger claims nothing to do with the redress scheme is tucked away at the back of the consultation. It is proposed to repeal the legislation which allows successful claimants some choice over their care packages and the ability to purchase services from private providers. They would be at the mercy of what the NHS/local authorities decide to give them or can afford – just like anyone else. What will happen in Scotland remains to be seen but it will certainly be interesting. Whereas in England, we have the bizarre situation of Government policy on civil litigation seemingly being driven by the Department of Health in an attempt to save money for itself, rather than by the Ministry of Justice. That sets a worrying precedent in itself. However, the ‘fixed recoverable costs regime’ it is proposing to impose on clinical negligence claims has huge dangers for both access to justice and patient safety. It may not be possible for claimants, especially those with lower value claims, to find a solicitor who could afford to represent them. It may encourage more of a ‘deny and defend’ culture in the NHS where defendants could be safe in the knowledge that if they deny liability it simply won’t be feasible for them to be challenged. That in turn could be very damaging for patient safety. Whereas legal challenges currently mean that the NHS is brought to a realisation about its failings, these cases would be assumed to hold no lessons in the future. At the time of writing, the Department of Health is about to publish its consultation (expected in July 2016). AvMA has been lobbying hard for a more enlightened approach that takes both access to justice and patient safety more seriously. Watch this space for what we think about what does emerge.
临床过失诉讼-有更好的方法吗?
几十年来,人们一直在谴责临床过失诉讼给NHS带来的巨大经济成本——更不用说更大的人力成本了。作为一个既致力于患者安全和诉诸司法的慈善机构,AvMA也一直认为,长期以来,人们一直未能从诉讼中吸取教训,改善患者的安全。几乎没有证据表明这种情况正在大规模发生。随着不断增加的财政压力影响国民保健服务,一些新的方法来处理临床疏忽正在英国各地提出。多年来,苏格兰政府一直在就一个专家咨询小组提出的“无过错赔偿”计划的建议进行咨询。他们提出的建议是所谓的“无责任补救计划”。虽然乍一看,这些提议不像最初的提议那么全面,但它们相当激进。该计划将适用于价值10万英镑以下的“索赔”,约占苏格兰现有索赔的70%。其最激进的方面是,除了不需要通过诉讼获得赔偿外,资格标准是基于“可避免性”和“合理”待遇。该计划将“迅速而公平地提供补偿……如果采取合理的谨慎措施,这种伤害是可以避免的。”到目前为止,一切顺利。使用“回避性测试”有很多好处。这应该意味着有更多的人有资格获得赔偿,而不是在医疗过失的法律检验下。这意味着你不需要指责并将“疏忽”归咎于个人,它更符合患者安全-着眼于根本原因,系统故障以及如何预防此类事件。但是,咨询文件非常缺乏细节。根据这些细节,这可能是一种完全不同的方法,对病人更好,对病人安全更好,也可能是一场灾难。对于“合理”护理的含义,还需要更多的明确说明。没有提到为患者提供独立的法律咨询。提出该方案不是独立的。事实上,它是由目前在苏格兰为针对NHS的索赔辩护的组织——中央法律办公室管理的。更糟糕的是,一个对医疗过失受害者有着巨大影响的令人讨厌的意外被藏在咨询的后面,这些受害者有更多的索赔,与补救计划无关。有人提议废除一项立法,该立法允许成功的索赔人对他们的护理方案有一些选择,并有能力从私人提供者那里购买服务。就像其他人一样,他们将受到NHS/地方当局决定给予他们或负担得起的东西的摆布。苏格兰会发生什么还有待观察,但肯定会很有趣。而在英国,我们有一个奇怪的情况,政府在民事诉讼方面的政策似乎是由卫生部推动的,目的是为自己省钱,而不是由司法部推动。这本身就开创了一个令人担忧的先例。然而,它提议对临床过失索赔施加的“固定可收回成本制度”对诉诸司法和患者安全都有巨大的危险。索赔人,特别是那些索赔金额较低的索赔人,可能找不到一个能负担得起的律师代表他们。这可能会在NHS中鼓励更多的“否认和辩护”文化,在这种文化中,被告可以放心,因为他们知道,如果他们否认责任,他们就不可能受到挑战。这反过来又会对病人的安全造成极大的损害。虽然目前的法律挑战意味着NHS意识到自己的失败,但这些案例在未来不会有任何教训。在撰写本文时,卫生部即将公布其咨询意见(预计在2016年7月)。AvMA一直在努力游说一个更开明的方法,更认真地对待获得司法公正和患者安全。关注这个空间,看看我们是怎么想的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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