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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Manan v General Dental Council [2023] EWHC 2604 (Admin) (20 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2604.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2604 (Admin) |
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AC-2022-LDS-000240 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
SITTING IN LEEDS
B e f o r e :
____________________
GHAFOOR MANAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GENERAL DENTAL COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Peter Mant (instructed by GDC) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10.10.23
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Crown Copyright ©
FORDHAM J:
Introduction
(1ZA) The overarching objective of the [GDC] is the protection of the public. (1ZB) The pursuit by the [GDC] of their overarching objective involves the pursuit of the following objectives (a) to protect, promote and maintain the health, safety and well-being of the public; (b) to promote and maintain public confidence in the professions regulated under this Act; and (c) to promote and maintain proper professional standards and conduct for members of those professions. (1A) When exercising their functions under this Act, the [GDC] shall have proper regard for (a) the interests of persons using or needing the services of registered dentists or registered dental care professionals in the United Kingdom; and (b) any differing interests of different categories of registered dentists or registered dental care professionals.
This Appeal
Adverse Findings of Fact
Features of the Findings Emphasised by Dr Manan
Features of the Findings Emphasised by the GDC
Not an Erasure Case
The Certified Convictions
(1) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Ms Shumaila Abdul Rehman. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. (2) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Ms Fozia Khan. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. (3) On 05/11/2019 Mr Ghafoor Manan carried on the business of dentistry, namely receiving payment for dental treatment from Ms Fazila Khan in the amount of £260 (cash) at Morden Dental Clinic 6 Crown Parade Morden SM4 5AG. Contrary to section 41 of the Dentists Act 1984. (4) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Mr Nasrullah Khan. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. (5) On 05/1 1/2019 Mr Ghafoor Manan carried on the business of dentistry, namely receiving payment for dental treatment from Mr Nasrullah Khan in the amount of £60 (cash) at 8 London Road, Morden SM4 5BH. Contrary to section 41 of the Dentists Act 1984. (6) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Ms Fozia Khan at Morden Dental Clinic 6 Crown Parade Morden SM4 5AG. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. (7) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Ms Shumaila Abdul Rehman at Wandsworth Town Dental Practice, 140 Garratt Lane, SW18 4EE. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. (8) Mr Ghafoor Manan carried out dental treatment on Ms Shumaila Abdul Rehman at Wandsworth Town Dental Practice, 140 Garratt Lane, SW18 4EE. Contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984.
Analysis of the Certified Convictions
[1] Your GDC registration was subject to an order for interim suspension pending the determination of this case which, for reasons beyond your control, has regrettably taken nearly 2 years longer than initially envisaged. On 9 February 2021 you were convicted in the Lavender Hill Magistrates' Court of eight counts relating to the unlawful practice of dentistry when your registration was suspended as a result of the order for interim suspension.
[2] The fact of your convictions was before the Committee at this stage of the proceedings because it forms part of your regulatory history. It was the GDC's submission that your convictions mean that you can no longer be trusted to comply with any restriction on your registration and that, if the Committee were to find current impairment in respect of the facts which it has determined, erasure would be the appropriate sanction in all the circumstances of this case. The Committee is not asked to consider your convictions as being in themselves a ground of impairment, or to otherwise impose a sanction directly in response to those convictions. These would be matters for another Practice Committee to decide in due course, were those convictions to be referred under the GDC's fitness to practise procedures. At present, the convictions have not been referred and are only before the Committee as a factor to consider when deciding (if it reaches that stage) the questions of impairment and sanction in respect of the facts found proved relating to your care and treatment of Patient A and your responses to her complaint and to the GDC's ensuing investigation.
[3] The certified memorandum of conviction was the only document before the Committee relating to the convictions. It records that six of the counts in respect of which you were convicted were for carrying out dental treatment on a total of three patients at the Morden and Wandsworth Practices (and potentially a third address), contrary to section 38 of the Dentists Act 1984. The date(s) on which these offences were committed is not specified in the terms of the memorandum of conviction. The remaining two counts were recorded as being for receiving cash payments for dental treatment from two people on 5 November 2019, thus carrying on the business of dentistry contrary to section 41 of the Dentists Act 1984. You were fined £500.00 for each of the eight counts, ordered to pay costs totalling £5000.00, a victim surcharge of £181.00 and compensation to two victims totalling £320.00.
[4] Mr McDonagh (who had not acted for you in the criminal proceedings) initially submitted to the Committee that, as instructed by you, your convictions involved an "isolated" incident where you had booked a family for the completion of their treatment with a locum, but that the locum did not "turn up" and so you treated the family yourself in response to pressure from them. When referred by the Committee to the terms of the memorandum of conviction, which refers to the patients being treated from more than one practice address, Mr McDonagh said he was unable to provide the Committee with any further detail or clarity as to the nature of the offending for which you were convicted.
[5] The Committee had regard to Rule 57 of the General Dental Council (Fitness to Practise) Rules 2006, which provides that: (5) Where a respondent has been convicted of a criminal offence (a) a copy of the certificate of conviction, certified by a competent officer of a court in the United Kingdom (or, in Scotland, an extract conviction) shall be conclusive proof of the conviction; and (b) the findings of fact upon which the conviction is based shall be admissible as proof of those facts.
[6] There was no dispute that you were the person referred to in the memorandum conviction and that you had received the convictions in question. You pled guilty to all eight charges. The Committee accepted the terms of the memorandum of conviction as establishing that you had been convicted of six counts providing dental treatment to three patients from at least two different practice addresses and that you had unlawfully received cash payments for dental treatment from two people on 5 November 2019. The Committee therefore did not accept that your criminal offending related to an isolated occasion when a locum did not "turn up" to treat a family, as your offending took place in at least two different dental practices.
Misconduct
The duty of candour is a fundamental tenet of the profession and your breach of it was unprofessional and lacking integrity, as was your conduct in relation to asking Patient A to withdraw her allegations of sexual misconduct and also when responding to the GDC's requests in relation to Patient A's dental records. Such conduct is a serious departure from basic professional standards and has the potential to bring the profession into disrepute. A lack of integrity in any professional person is a serious matter, as it undermines the confidence the public and the profession can place in the practitioner in terms of compliance with the higher ethical and professional standards to which they are subject.
Impairment
[a] Your attitudinal failings, relating to your unprofessional conduct and your lack of integrity, are more difficult to remedy in the Committee's judgment. These matters go to your character and encompassed both your interactions with Patient A and also with your regulatory body. There is no evidence of any structured steps towards remediation, such as mentorship or peer-based discussion. There is little evidence of any meaningful reflection by you on your unprofessional conduct and lack of integrity and the impact this had on Patient A and on the GDC's ability to discharge its regulatory functions. There has been no meaningful reflection by you on how your actions had the potential to bring the profession into disrepute and to otherwise undermine public confidence in the profession and in the GDC's regulatory role. The Committee noted that rather than provide adequate evidence of remediation you had instead received eight convictions relating to the unlawful practice of dentistry by breaching the interim suspension order imposed on you during the course of these proceedings.
[b] In the Committee's judgment, the lack of evidence of full remediation means that there is a risk of harm to the public should you be allowed to practise without restriction. Public confidence in the profession and in this regulatory process would also be seriously undermined if no finding of impairment were to be made. The Committee considered you had put Patient A at an unwarranted risk of harm and had caused actual harm to her and that you are liable to do so again with patients in the future. You had also acted in a way which was liable to bring the profession into disrepute through your lack of integrity, particularly in relation to your failure to comply with the duty of candour, and that you are liable to demonstrate a lack of integrity again in the future.
Sanction
[i] The purpose of a sanction is not to be punitive, although it may have that effect, but to protect the public and the wider public interest.
[ii] In deciding on what sanction, if any, to impose on your registration, the Committee had regard to the aggravating and mitigating features present in this case.
[iii] The aggravating features present include actual harm caused to Patient A, a breach of her trust in respect of your failure to have complied with the duty of candour, limited remediation and insight demonstrated at this stage of the proceedings and a blatant or wilful disregard of the role of the GDC and the systems regulating the profession. Your convictions for unlawful practice that took place whilst these proceedings were ongoing are also an aggravating factor, undermining your trustworthiness, and demonstrating a disregard for regulatory orders.
[iv] In mitigation the Committee recognised that there has been some expression of remorse by you, that you have taken some steps towards remediation, that you had attended and engaged fully in the hearing, and that you have no previous fitness to practise history.
[v] The Committee considered the question of sanction in ascending order of severity.
[vi] To conclude this case with no action and reprimand would be wholly inappropriate in the Committee's judgment, given the seriousness of your misconduct and the lack of remediation which you demonstrate. Taking no further action or issuing a reprimand would not protect the public and meet the wider public interest.
[vii] The Committee next considered whether conditions of practice could be formulated which would be workable, measurable and proportionate. The Committee considered that conditions of practice might be appropriate to address the clinical concerns in this case. However, the Committee could not identify conditions of practice which could be formulated to address the behavioural issues identified in this case. The Committee determined that conditions of practice would not in any event be sufficient to mark the seriousness of those non-clinical aspects of your misconduct. Further, the Committee could not place its trust in you to comply with conditions on your practice in light of your convictions for illegally practising dentistry in breach of the interim suspension order which was made as part of these proceedings. In the Committee's judgment there appear to be deep seated underlying professional attitudinal problems relating to your failure to take the role of the GDC seriously.
[viii] The Committee next considered whether to direct that your registration be suspended for a period of up to 12 months, with or without a review. In the Committee's judgment, suspension would not be sufficient to maintain public confidence in the profession and this regulatory process. This is because of your breaches of the interim suspension order which resulted in your receiving eight convictions relating to the unlawful practice of dentistry. Such conduct, whatever the precise details of your offending, was truly extraordinary and wholly unacceptable from a regulatory perspective. It is conduct which destroys the ability of the public, the profession and the GDC as regulator to trust you to comply with any restriction on your registration, including a period of suspension. In reaching its decision, the Committee was mindful that protecting the reputation of the profession outweighs your personal interests. The Committee considered the facts relating to your misconduct would not in themselves ordinarily result in the ultimate sanction of erasure. However, [i] the consequence of your criminal convictions, coupled with [ii] your misconduct in the present case, where you had repeatedly acted with a lack of integrity, along with [iii] your lack of any full or meaningful remediation, makes erasure the only appropriate and proportionate outcome. In the Committee's judgment no lesser sanction would be sufficient to protect the public and to maintain public confidence in the profession and in this regulatory process.
[ix] Accordingly, the Committee directs that your name be erased from the Register.
Dr Manan's Appeal
Discussion
The breach of [the interim suspension order] would only be relevant if in fact you were to conclude that Dr Manan could not be trusted to comply with any substantive order of conditions and I'm afraid you cannot fairly come to that conclusion/that inference from this may conviction.
Returning to the same topic later, Mr McDonagh told the Committee:
Its relevance is limited to this. If it were permissible for you to conclude that this conviction means that actually this dentist cannot be trusted with anything, to comply with an order of suspension or conditions, then it might be appropriate to suggest that the conviction itself, even though it does not have a regulatory background, would allow you to erase because nothing else is possible.
it is conduct which destroys the ability of the public, the profession and the GDC as regulator to trust you to comply with any restriction on your registration, including a period of suspension.
The Committee added that, in reaching its decision, it was mindful that protecting the reputation of the profession outweighed the clinician's personal interests. In reaching its conclusion on the destruction of trust, the Committee was upholding the GDC's submission identified earlier in the Analysis of the Certified Convictions at [2] (§15 above).
Outcome