Abstract

Doctors may also be criminals. Mercifully, this is a rare event but no health professional is infallible, mistakes happen and the challenge is to distinguish inadvertence from wilful disregard for the consequences. Healthcare professionals are uneasy about the readiness of the current law to attribute criminal responsibility accompanied by a failure to recognise the highly pressurised context in which sub-standard practice occurs. This article argues that the offence of gross negligence manslaughter is improperly defined and fails to target those doctors whom society should criminalise. Alternatives to gross negligence manslaughter to include culpable homicide adopted in Scotland and the major departure test favoured by New Zealand are considered before advocating a more radical approach—the sliding scale of negligence. Using existing tests in civil and administrative law, a more objective test of gross negligence is proposed, with culpability as a mandatory requirement for a doctor to be convicted of a crime. It is contended the law must move away from the stance a patient’s death is required for medical negligence to become a crime, an outcome bias, to a conduct biased offence. There is no underlying reason why culpable gross negligence causing serious harm should not also be subject to criminal sanction. The recent sentencing guidelines demonstrate the law is sophisticated enough to distinguish reprehensible conduct from careless behaviour. It is now time for the legal test to also acknowledge all the circumstances of the alleged crime.

Highlights

  • Gross Negligence Manslaughter and DoctorsThe criminal doctor makes for a good story.[1]

  • Their very personal stories have reignited the debate whether doctors should be subject to the criminal law and more whether doctors should, and if so how, be prosecuted for gross negligence manslaughter

  • Horder contends that criminal liability may be justified if the defendant ‘acted in spite of the reasons against so acting where those reasons outweighed the reasons in favour, and he knew or she knew or suspected that this was the case.’[102]. For a finding of gross negligence manslaughter there must be ‘some conscious, occurrent awareness of a risk of harm to others, wilful blindness or cognitive dissonance in respect of such a risk’

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Summary

Introduction

Gross Negligence Manslaughter and DoctorsThe criminal doctor makes for a good story.[1].

Results
Conclusion
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