Professional governance and clinical negligence Flashcards

1
Q

How the law is (broadly) organised

A
  • Statutory
    • Criminal legislation
    • Administrative legislation
    • Professional legislation
  • Common (civil)
    • E.g. negligence trespass, defamation
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Fitness to practice

A
  • A pharmacy professional is fit to practise when they have the skills, knowledge, character and health necessary to do their job safely and effectively and when they act professionally and meet the prinicples of good practice set out in our various standards, guidance and advice
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Registered pharmacy professionals must

A
  • Complete an annual fitness to practise declaration
  • Let the GPhC know within seven days if they become aware of an issue which may affect their fitness to practise
  • A complete revalidation including 4 CPD records, a peer review and a short reflective account
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

GPhC standards for pharmacy professionals

A
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians order 2007- impairment

A
  • A person’s fitness to practise may be impaired by reason of any of following
    • Misconduct
    • Deficient professional performance
    • Adverse physical or mental health
    • Failure to comply with Reasonable requirement by assesor
    • A conviction for a criminal offence-British isles
    • A police caution- British isles
    • Finding impaired fitness to practice by health or social care regulatory body
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Public interest

A
  • Committes must act in the public interest when considering fitness to practise issues
    • Protect members of the public
    • Maintain public confidence in the profession
    • Declare and uphold proper standards of conduct and behaviour
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Fair trial

A
  • Registrant is entitled (common law) to
    • An unbiased tribunal
    • A right to be present and to be represented
    • A right to reason for any decision
  • Also European convention on human rights, Art, registrant is entitled to
    • A fair and public hearing
    • Within a reasonable time
    • By an independent and impartial tribunal established by law
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Proportionality

A
  • Committee
    • Exercises discretion in a way that is fair and Reasonable
    • Weighs interests of practitioner against the wider ‘public intrest’
    • Considers range of sanctions available to it
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Purpose of saction

A
  • Protect the public
  • Maintain public confidence in the profession
  • Maintain proper standards
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Bolton v Law society

A
  • The reputation of the profession is more important than the fortunes of any individual member
  • Membership of a profession brings many benefits, but that is part of the price
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Raising concerns

A
  • Every pharmacy professional has a duty to raise any concerns about individuals, actions or circumstances that may be unacceptable and that could result in risks to patient and public safety
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

The GPhC investigates a wide range of fitness to practise issues including

A
  • Errors in dispensing medication
  • Sexual misconduct
  • Pharmacy professionals working under the influence of alcohol or drugs
  • Fraud
  • Theft
  • Dishonesty
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Operation of FTP

A
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Referral to investigating committee

Threshold criteria

A
  • The registrar should not refer a case to the IC unless the evidence as a whole suggests that
  • Conduct, performance
    • It presents an actual or potential risk to the patient or public safety
    • It undermines or is likely to undermine, confidence in the pharmacy professions
    • There has been a serious or persistent failure to meet any of the standards for pharmacy professionals or
    • The honesty or integrity of the pharmacy profession can no longer be relied upon
  • Health- there is adverse physical or mental health which presents a risk to the pharmacy professionals ability to practice safely or effectively
  • Public interest- and it is the public interest to refer
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

From the GPhC

A
  • Regulation should not create unnecessary burdens, but be proportionate to the risk it addresses and benefit it brings
  • It should support and enable the working lives of pharmacists and pharmacy technicians and open up pathways to a satisfying career, rather than being seen purely as a means of discipline
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Laws and the legal system

A
  • Statute law- This is law which has been laid before parliament and enshrined in acts, orders, regulations
  • Common law- The is law that has arisen from the courts system
    • The law of tort is part of common law
17
Q

The law of negligence

A
  • If a healthcare professional commits a tort or breaks a contract, they are liable for any damage caused and may be sued in a court of law
  • Liability= having a legal obligation
  • The law of negligence applies when a person’s property has been damaged or they suffer an injury through someone else’s careless action
  • The injury caused could be financial or physical
18
Q

Proving negligence

A
  • The plaintiff (injured person) must prove three things in a court of law
    • A duty of care exists
    • There was a breach of that duty
    • That breach resulted in damage to the plaintiff
  • All three elements must be proven
  • If the court is not satisfied that all three have been proven, the case will fail
19
Q

A duty of care exists when

A
  • The damage caused was reasonably foreseeable AND
    • There was a sufficiently proximate relationship between the parties
      • That breach resulted in damage to the plaintiff
20
Q

What is a foreseeable damage

A
21
Q

What is a proximate relationship

A
22
Q

Proximity

A
  • Somebody is proximate if they will be directly affected by your act to the extent that you ought to have them in your mide when performing that act (you do not need to be physically touching them for them to be legally ‘proximate’ to you)
23
Q

Does a duty of care exist

A
  • Look at some cases
  • Apply the three legal tests to see whether there is a legal duty of care owed
  • Our concern is not whether it seems morally or professionally right to assign a duty of care, nor is it whether we feel the act is negligent
  • Simply interested in the legal position regarding the duty of care
24
Q

Our four cases

A
  1. Rendering first aid in a road traffic accident- you move the injured party from the road and this results in spinal damage
  2. Rendering first aid in the pharmacy- you do not clean the wound properly and infection results
  3. Giving advice regarding a prescription medication- your advice is incorrect and the patient takes too much of the product
  4. A woman for who you dispense a broad spectrum antibiotic also takes an oral contraceptive; you do not counsel her appropriately and pregnancy results
25
Q

Professional vs Individual roles

A
  • There is no legal imperative to assist the victim of an accident, just because they might benefit from the assistance (there may be a professional requirement)
  • You only have a legal duty of care if it exists because of your job
  • So a patient in a pharmacy can reasonably expect to receive care from a HCP
26
Q

Breach of the duty of care

A
  • Centres on the standard of care given
  • A breach of the duty of care is proven if the professional did not reach the standard of practice required by the law
27
Q

The legal standard of care is defined by

A
  • Bolam test- if the claim for negligence arises from an action or omission to act
  • Montgomery test - if the claim for negligence arises from a failure to secure adequate consent
28
Q

The bolam test

A
  • Accepted standard of care- that which is thought to be acceptable to HCP’s professional peers
  • So a HCP cannot be held negligent if s/he acts in a manner which is acceptable to their professional pears
  • Their peers may not have acted in the same way but must regard the defendant’s action as falling within the range of acceptable practice
  • The HCP is negligent if the care that her or she provides falls below the minimum standard of skill or care which the medical (or pharmaceutical) profession regards as acceptable in the particular circumstances
  • Importantly, this means that the medical professional (or pharmacist) will not be judged by the standard of the elite but will be expected to reach the standard of the average competent doctor
29
Q

The Bolam test

A
  • Is very well established in English law and is applied to all health care professionals
  • Is subject to additional interpretations, for example if 2 sets of professional witness disagree with another
  • However, a more in depth treatment is beyond the scope of this course
  • In any case, you will hopefully never have the bolam test applied to you
30
Q

The Montgomery test

A
  • The accepted standard of care is that HCP must take ‘reasonable care to ensure that the patient is away of any material risks involved in any recommended treatment, and of any reasonable alternative or variant treatments’
31
Q

The breach caused injury or damage

A
  • This can be the most difficult element to prove (although it is sometimes relatively straightforward)
  • Even if the defendant is clearly at faulty, if it cannot be proven that their actions caused the damage, the claim will fail
32
Q

A landmark case

A
  • A man presented to A&E complaining of stomach pain
  • The attending doctor failed to examine him but told him to present to his GP is the pain persisted
  • The man died before he could get to his GP
  • Was the A&E doctor guilty of negligence
33
Q

Not according to the courts

A
  • He certainly had a duty of care, and he failed to meet the standard of care
  • BUT- his action did not cause the main to die
  • The man was suffering from arsenic poisoning
  • Even if he had been examined, it was too late to administer and antidote, and he would have died in any case
34
Q

Four important cases

A
  • The migril case 1982
  • The Daonil 1988
  • The Epilim case 2000
  • The dexamethasone 2006
35
Q

Sir Brian Leveson

A
  • The implications for medical and other professions would be serious because people would be guilty of gross negligence manslaughter by reason of negligent omissions to carry out routine eye, blood and other tests which in fact would have revealed fatal conditions notwithstanding that the circumstances were such that it was not reasonably foreseeable that failure to carry out such test would carry an obvious and serious risk of death