BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> General Medical Council v Nwachuku [2017] EWHC 2085 (Admin) (10 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/2085.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2085 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
IN THE MATTERS OF:
AN APPEAL UNDER SECTION 40A OF THE MEDICAL ACT 1983
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL | Appellant | |
-and- | ||
DR IHEANYI CHIDI NWACHUKU | ||
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS AUTHORITY FOR HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE | Respondents | |
AND | ||
A RENEWED APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO SEEK JUDICIAL REVIEW | CO/1824/2017 | |
THE QUEEN | ||
(on the application of DR IHEANYI CHIDI NWACHUKU) | Claimant | |
-and- | ||
GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL | Defendant | |
-and- | ||
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS AUTHORITY FOR HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE | Interested Party |
____________________
Charles Foster (instructed by RadcliffesLeBrasseur) for the First Respondent
Fenella Morris QC (instructed by PSA) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 8th June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice O'Farrell:
Relevant background
"With the agreement of your trainer/educational supervisor, you may arrange to undertake any duties or professional activities outside those of the practice whether remunerated or not. Agreement will not be unreasonably withheld. Any medical duties or appointments outside the practice area must not compete with the trainer/educational supervisor's practice or impinge on your contracted duties with the practice, or upon your GP speciality training. This applies equally whether such duties are remunerated or not. Such duties should not lead to a breach in UK Working Time Regulations…"
The disciplinary proceedings
i) "On 9-12 October 2015, you undertook three night-shifts of locum work ("the Locum Shifts") through Athona Recruitment ("the Agency") at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital ("the Hospital"). You:
a) failed to obtain the consent of your GP trainer/educational supervisor, Dr A, to undertake the Locum Shifts;b) left the Hospital at or around 06:00 on 12 October 2015 despite:i) being contracted to work until 08:00 on 12 October 2015;ii) failing to conduct an adequate handover;iii) the Hospital being without Senior House Officer cover on your departure;iv) being asked not to leave by the orthopaedic registrar on duty Dr [Malhotra];c) submitted a claim form for the Locum Shifts, in which you stated you had worked until 08:30 on 12 October 2015 when you had not;d) informed your Deanery, Health Education England Wessex, that you had told the Agency that you had to leave the Hospital at 06:00 on 12 October 2015 when you had not done so;e) did not allow a sufficient rest break between the end of the Locum Shifts and the commencement of your full-time GP training role.ii) Your conduct as set out at paragraphs i)c) and i)d) above was:
a) misleading;b) dishonest.
And that by reason of the matters set out above your fitness to practise is impaired because of your misconduct."
"The tribunal noted that you submitted this form ahead of completing the last shift out of the three for which you had been contracted. However, you knew that you were unable to stay beyond 06:00 on 12 October 2015 due to other employment commitments. On 11 October 2015 you submitted a timesheet which was clearly inaccurate because it claimed you had worked hours that you knew you had not been working, and had no intention of working. The tribunal concluded that a reasonable and honest person would consider submitting a timesheet stating that you had worked until 08:30 when you had not done so to be dishonest, because it gave information that plainly overstated the number of hours you were intending to work.
The tribunal went on to consider whether you knew that your conduct was dishonest when you submitted your timesheet.
The tribunal noted that you were provided with several opportunities to ensure that Dr Malhotra knew you had to leave by 06:00 on 12 October 2015. In his evidence to the tribunal Dr Malhotra stated that he had asked you, albeit in a joking manner, whether you were planning on staying until the end of the shift, as he had signed the timesheet in advance. The tribunal considered that this was an opportunity for you to have acknowledged your intended early finish or to have corrected your timesheet to accurately reflect your intention. The tribunal also heard from you that his was a quiet and uneventful night at the Hospital. You sent the timesheet through to Athona Recruitment in your rest period, without making any amendment to it. You knew you would not be working until 08:30 on the Monday morning. Even after you had sent the timesheet to Athona Recruitment, you still did not take the opportunity to advise them that the hours claimed for the nights of 11/12 October 2015 needed to be corrected. Your evidence about assuming the information on the timesheet would be corrected pointed to an abdication of responsibility on your part of the need to ensure that the information you provided was, as stated in the declaration on the timesheet, correct.
In all the circumstances, the tribunal was therefore satisfied that you must have realised that your conduct in submitting a timesheet, which you had signed to confirm as being "correct and complete" was dishonest at the time you submitted the timesheet to Athona Recruitment. It there found paragraph 2(b) of the allegation provided in relation to paragraph 1(c)."
i) leaving the hospital early despite being contracted until 08:00;
ii) failing to conduct a handover;
iii) leaving the hospital without a Senior House Officer;
iv) leaving the hospital early despite being asked to stay by Dr Malhotra.
"In relation to the finding of dishonesty concerning the submission of the timesheet to Athona Recruitment, the tribunal bore in mind the requirement for honesty, both as a fundamental tenet of medical practice and as set out in paragraph 71 of Good Medical Practice (2013). Submitting a timesheet which, on the face of it, makes a claim for payment for work you have not actually done and were not intending to do is conduct that has the potential to bring the medical profession into disrepute. That is because it can undermine the trust that the public and patients place in their doctors. For those reasons, the tribunal is also satisfied that the dishonest submission to Athona Recruitment of the timesheet containing false information was, in itself, misconduct."
i) a range of testimonials were produced as to his honesty and integrity in other circumstances, as well as his skills as a clinician;
ii) there was no information to suggest that he had behaved dishonestly, or had neglected his obligation to provide continuity of care to patients, either before or after these events;
iii) he provided a written statement, reflecting on his conduct and stating that he no longer undertakes locum posts via an agency;
iv) he accepted in cross-examination that his actions in relation to the timesheet were dishonest;
v) the tribunal was satisfied that his misconduct was remediable;
vi) the tribunal did not consider that public confidence in the profession would be undermined if no finding of current impairment was made in this case.
"An MPTS tribunal sitting in January 2017 found that, in October 2015, you undertook three locum night shifts without obtaining the consent of your GP trainer. It also found that on the final night shift you left the Hospital two hours early despite your contracted hours. It found that in doing so you failed to conduct an adequate handover and left the hospital without a Senior House Officer despite a request for you to stay from the Registrar on shift. The tribunal found that you did not allow a sufficient rest break between the end of your locum post and the commencement of your full-time post. The MPTS tribunal also found that you dishonestly submitted a claim form stating that you had worked for 2.5 hours longer than you intended working.
This conduct does not meet with the standards required of a doctor. It risks bringing the profession into disrepute and it must not be repeated. The required standards are set out in Good Medical Practice and associated guidance.
In this case, a number of paragraphs of Good Medical Practice (2013) are particularly relevant:
1. Patients need good doctors. Good doctors make the care of their patients their first concern: they are competent, keep their knowledge and skills up to date, establish and maintain good relationships with patients and colleagues, are honest and trustworthy, and act with integrity and within the law.
44. You must contribute to the safe transfer of patients between healthcare providers and between health and social care providers. This means you must
a. share all relevant information with colleagues involved in your patients' care within and outside the team, including when you hand over care as you go off duty, and when you delegate care or refer patients to other health or social care providers,
b. check, where practical, that a named clinician or team has taken over responsibility when your role in providing a patient's care has ended. This may be particularly important for patients with impaired capacity or who are vulnerable for other reasons.
65. You must make sure that your conduct justifies your patients' trust in you and the public's trust in the profession.
71. You must be honest and trustworthy when writing reports, and when completing or signing forms, reports and other documents. You must make sure that any documents you write or sign are not false or misleading.
a. You must take reasonable steps to check the information is correct.
b. You must not deliberately leave out relevant information.
Whilst this failing in itself is not so serious as to require any restriction on your registration, it is necessary in response to issue this formal warning.
This warning will be published on the List of Registered Medical Practitioners (LRMP) for a period of five years and will be disclosed to any person enquiring about your fitness to practise history. After five years, the warning will cease to be published on the LRMP. However, it will be kept on record and disclosed to employers on request."
Judicial Review
i) the tribunal applied the wrong test in making a finding of dishonesty against him; and
ii) if there was no dishonesty on the part of Dr Nwachuku, the tribunal should not have issued a warning in respect of dishonesty.
"… whether according to the ordinary standards of reasonable and honest people what was done was dishonest …
If it was dishonest by those standards … whether the defendant himself must have realised that what he was doing was by those standards dishonest …"
"Your evidence about assuming the information on the timesheet would be corrected pointed to an abdication of responsibility on your part of the need to ensure that the information you provided was, as stated in the declaration on the timesheet, correct."
i) when he presented the timesheet to Dr Malhotra;
ii) when Dr Malhotra asked whether Dr Nwachuku would be working until the end of his shift;
iii) when the timesheet was sent to the agency during Dr Nwachuku's rest period;
iv) after the timesheet had been sent to the agency, having told Dr Malhotra that he would amend the timesheet.
"In all the circumstances, the tribunal was therefore satisfied that you must have realised that your conduct in submitting a timesheet, which you had signed to confirm as being "correct and complete" was dishonest at the time you submitted the timesheet to Athona Recruitment."
Jurisdiction to Appeal
Section 35D:
"(2) Where the Medical Practitioners Tribunal find that the person's fitness to practise is impaired they may, if they think fit-
(a) … direct that the person's name shall be erased from the register;
(b) direct that his registration shall be suspended …; or
(c) direct that his registration shall be conditional on his compliance … with … such requirements so specified as the Tribunal think fit to impose for the protection of members of the public or in his interests.
"(3) Where the Tribunal find that the person's fitness to practise is not impaired they may nevertheless give him a warning regarding his future conduct or performance …"
Section 40A:
"(1) This section applies to any of the following decisions by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal-"
…
(d) a decision not to give a direction under section 35D …
"(2) A decision to which this section applies is referred to below as a 'relevant decision'.
"(3) The General Council may appeal against a relevant decision to the relevant court if they consider that the decision is not sufficient (whether as to a finding or a penalty or both) for the protection of the public.
"(4) Consideration of whether a decision is sufficient for the protection of the public involves consideration of whether it is sufficient-
(a) to protect the health, safety and well-being of the public;
(b) to maintain public confidence in the medical profession; and
(c) to maintain proper professional standards and conduct for members of that profession…
"(6) On an appeal under this section, the court may –
(a) dismiss the appeal;
(b) allow the appeal and quash the relevant decision;
(c) substitute for the relevant decision any other decision which could have been made by the Tribunal; or
(d) remit the case to the MPTS for them to arrange for a Medical Practitioners Tribunal to dispose of the case in accordance with the directions of the court,
and may make such order as to costs … as it thinks fit."
Applicable principles on the appeal
"… the well-settled principles developed in relation to section 40 appeals (in cases including: Meadow v General Medical Council [2006] EWCA Civ 1390; [2007] QB 462; Fatnani and Raschid v General Medical Council [2007] EWCA Civ 46; [2007] 1 WLR 1460; and Southall v General Medical Council [2010] EWCA Civ 407; [2010] 2 FLR 1550) as appropriately modified, can be applied to section 40A appeals.
i) Proceedings under section 40A of the 1983 Act are appeals and are governed by CPR Part 52. A court will allow an appeal under CPR Part 52.21(3) if it is 'wrong' or 'unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court'.
ii) It is not appropriate to add any qualification to the test in CPR Part 52 that decisions are 'clearly wrong': see Fatnani at paragraph 21 and Meadow at paragraphs 125 to 128.
iii) The court will correct material errors of fact and of law: see Fatnani at paragraph 20. Any appeal court must however be extremely cautious about upsetting a conclusion of primary fact, particularly where the findings depend upon the assessment of the credibility of the witnesses, who the Tribunal, unlike the appellate court, has had the advantage of seeing and hearing (see Assicurazioni Generali SpA v Arab Insurance Group (Practice Note) [2002] EWCA Civ 1642 at paragraphs 15 to 17, cited with approval in Datec Electronics Holdings Ltd v United Parcels Service Ltd [2007] UKHL 23, at paragraph 46, and Southall at paragraph 47).
iv) When the question is what inferences are to be drawn from specific facts, an appellate court is under less of a disadvantage. The court may draw any inferences of fact which it considers are justified on the evidence: see CPR Part 52.11(4).
v) In regulatory proceedings the appellate court will not have the professional expertise of the Tribunal of fact. As a consequence, the appellate court will approach Tribunal determinations about whether conduct is serious misconduct or impairs a person's fitness to practise, and what is necessary to maintain public confidence and proper standards in the profession and sanctions, with diffidence: see Fatnani at paragraph 16; and Khan v General Pharmaceutical Council [2016] UKSC 64 at paragraph 36.
vi) However there may be matters, such as dishonesty or sexual misconduct, where the court "is likely to feel that it can assess what is needed to protect the public or maintain the reputation of the profession more easily for itself and thus attach less weight to the expertise of the Tribunal …": see Council for the Regulation of Healthcare Professionals v GMC and Southall [2005] EWHC 579 at paragraph 11, and Khan at paragraph 36(c). As Lord Millett observed in Ghosh v GMC [2001] UKPC 29 the appellate court "will afford an appropriate measure of respect of the judgment in the committee … but the [appellate court] will not defer to the committee's judgment more than is warranted by the circumstances".
vii) Matters of mitigation are likely to be of considerably less significance in regulatory proceedings than to a court imposing retributive justice, because the overarching concern of the professional regulator is the protection of the public.
viii) A failure to provide adequate reasons may constitute a serious procedural irregularity which renders the Tribunal's decision unjust (see Southall at paragraphs 55 to 56)."
"In cases of actual proven dishonesty, the balance ordinarily can be expected to fall down on the side of maintaining public confidence in the profession by a severe sanction against the practitioner concerned. Indeed, that sanction will often and perfectly properly be the sanction of erasure, even in the case of a one-off instance of dishonesty."
Submissions
i) This was a serious case of dishonesty.
ii) Dr Nwachuku denied the allegation of dishonesty in the disciplinary proceedings and, although he admitted dishonesty following the tribunal's finding, he has attempted to overturn it in these proceedings.
iii) There was other serious misconduct, in that Dr Nwachuku failed to conduct any proper handover at the end of his shift and left the hospital without any SHO cover, creating a potential for serious harm to patients.
iv) The MPT attached too much weight to the mitigating factors relied on by Dr Nwachuku, namely, his testimonials and reflective witness statement.
i) The dishonesty was at the very bottom of the scale of dishonest conduct.
ii) Dr Nwachuku accepted full responsibility for his misconduct, as indicated by his reflective witness statement.
iii) Although he challenged the finding of dishonesty through these proceedings, it was on the basis that he accepted the tribunal's finding that he was irresponsible or negligent in ensuring that the information and declaration on his timesheet was correct.
iv) The tribunal found that there was no risk of repetition of his misconduct and no risk to the public.
Finding