Medical negligence - Key cases and application of legislation

Journal article


Cheluvappa, Rajkumar and Selvendran, Selwyn. (2020). Medical negligence - Key cases and application of legislation. Annals of Medicine and Surgery. 57, pp. 205-211. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.07.017
AuthorsCheluvappa, Rajkumar and Selvendran, Selwyn
Abstract

Background
Law entails precedent-based common law and parliamentary-legislation-based statutory law. Australian courts recognise civil wrongs, called torts. The most common tort worldwide is negligence. The first aim of the paper is to educate the Australian nursing community about medicolegal issues, statutes, important cases, legal applications, and negligence statistics pertaining to clinical practice. The second aim is to determine whether medicolegal negligence claim-numbers are commensurate with recorded statistics on adverse events. The third aim is to determine and discuss preventative approaches to minimise culpability.

Materials and methods
Relevant searches were done using Pubmed, Google Scholar, and Austlii. Data, negligence legislation, key cases, and law processes were collated and analysed based on court decision citations, legal impact, and relationships between legislation application and case law. Although New South Wales legislation was used throughout this paper, parallel statutes exist across Australian jurisdictions.

Results
The basics of the civil tort offence of negligence are explained with step-by-step explanations. Key judgments and application of legislation in key medical negligence cases are discussed. Relevant medicolegal issues and negligence statistics are discussed. The civil tort of negligence is elaborately discussed, step-by-step, with relevant Common Law and legislation relevant to NSW. The watershed cases of Hadiza Bawa-Garba and Nurse Amaro are summarised with the ramifications for doctors and nurses. Expedient strategies to assist doctors and nurses in minimising unlawful action are discussed.

Conclusions
Adverse medical events are high in Australia. However, new claims are decreasing. Negligence claim-numbers are disproportionate to statistics on adverse events. The Hadiza Bawa-Garba and Nurse Amaro cases have opened a legal can of worms with manifold negative ramifications for the nursing community.

Keywordsadverse event; Australia; law; medication error; midwife; negligence; nurse; nursing; tort
Year2020
JournalAnnals of Medicine and Surgery
Journal citation57, pp. 205-211
PublisherElsevier Ltd
ISSN2049-0801
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amsu.2020.07.017
PubMed ID32793340
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85089067663
PubMed Central IDPMC7413923
Open accessPublished as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
Research or scholarlyResearch
Page range205-211
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online17 Jul 2020
Publication process dates
Accepted11 Jul 2020
Deposited21 Mar 2022
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https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/8x928/medical-negligence-key-cases-and-application-of-legislation

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Publisher's version
OA_Cheluvappa_2020_Medical_negligence_Key_cases_and_application.pdf
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
File access level: Open

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