Abstract

A medical error resulting in a patient’s death is one of the most difficult experiences in the professional practice of medical personnel. A healthcare professional faces the suffering and grievances of the deceased patient's relatives and, at the same time, the prospect of legal liability including a criminal penalty and prohibition from practising a profession. This article attempts to address the issue of the necessity and usefulness of applying such far-reaching consequences in all cases of the patient's death caused through a fault attributable to a healthcare professional. It argues for the widest possible use of mediation in cases of medical error, in particular in criminal law cases. It focuses on reasonable expectations of the deceased patient’s family and the need for the improvement of standards of health protection in similar cases. This perspective makes it possible to conclude that a criminal penalty for the perpetrator of an error is not always in the public interest.
 As regards the possibility of using mediation in cases involving a medical error, this article refers to the Polish normative tradition, although the dilemma highlighted in its title is certainly of a universal and transnational nature.

Highlights

  • A patient’s death is an extremely difficult and dramatic situation, for the deceased patient’s family and for those who cared for the decedent during the time of illness

  • It is appropriate to return to the factual descriptions outlined above, the question posed in the title, and to draw some conclusions based on the paper’s analysis

  • The evidence leaves no doubt that an error was made by a doctor or nurse in all those cases

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Summary

Introduction

A patient’s death is an extremely difficult and dramatic situation, for the deceased patient’s family and for those who cared for the decedent during the time of illness. Mediation with the Deceased Patient’s Family in Criminal Cases Involving a Medical Error

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