Sunday, October 11, 2009

CME on “Medicolegal Report preparation”


Department of Forensic Medicine, DMCH, Ludhiana organized a CME on “Medicolegal Report preparation” on 29th Aug 09. Theme of the CME was: “Improving the Quality of Medicolegal Report preparation”. More than 100 doctors from North India participated in the CME.
Dr. Daljit Singh, Principal DMCH, informed about the various issues related to medicolegal report writing. He informed that the DMCH has pioneered, by organizing an educational program on procedure of medicolegal report writing.
Dr. Gautam Biswas Head, Forensic Medicine, delivered the welcome address. He delivered a lecture on overview of injury report preparation. Dr. BS Shah, Member Punjab Medical Council, informed all the doctors about CME credit hours required by all the doctors’.
Dr. Virendar Pal Singh (Org. Secretary) said that “presently the quality of medicolegal reports prepared is not satisfactory. Many a times, these reports are not serving any purpose in the Court of law. There is an urgent need for the doctors to realize their legal duties in medicolegal cases. He delivered a lecture on “Procedure of Medicolegal report preparation”.
Guest speakers delivered lectures on various issues related to medicolegal report preparation. Dr. Jagjiv Sharma, Head, Forensic Medicine, CMC discussed the need of consent in medical & medicolegal practice. Dr. Sanjeev Uppal, Professor in Plastic Surgery & Dr. Promila Jindal, Professor in Obs. & Gynae, informed the gathering about the medicolegal aspects of burn and rape cases respectively.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

SC ticks off doctors for medical negligent cases., The Hindu, May 29, 2009

The Supreme Court on Friday ticked off doctors for increasing number of medical negligence cases being reported in the country.
"Doctors can today do anything. They can leave behind a forcep or a scissor inside a patient's stomach and get away with it.
"Six months down the line when the patient develops pain and comes back, then you would discover the scissor left behind in the stomach and then remove it," a vacation bench of Justices Markandeya Katju and Deepak Verma remarked.
The bench made the remarks while issuing notice to Pintoo Kumar, a victim, on the petition filed by Dr Mahendra Prasad, a doctor who was slapped with a compensation of Rs 4 lakhs by the Bihar State Consumer Commission in a case of alleged medical negligence.
Mr. Kumar had alleged Prasad, a private medical practioner at the Neha Nursing Home, Buxar who had performed an operation on September 16, 2004, to set right a fracture in his right leg, left behind a screw in the operated portion. The alleged negligence resulted in the patient developing "callus formation" warranting another surgery at the Apollo hospital.
According to the victim, Dr. Prasad was not an orthopaedic surgeon but an MBBS with M.S (patho) and yet peformed the operation.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Free treatment: Pvt hospitals under lens

After the High Court lashed out at Apollo Hospital for not treating poor patients for free which was a condition for the hospital being given land at a discounted rate Delhi government health department has suddenly woken up to the rampant violation of the clause by almost all private hospitals who were given such land. It has now decided to post officials in all these hospitals who will not just monitor the status and utilization of these beds but also as instructed by the High Court inform patients in government hospitals about the option. At present, few needy patients ever go to these hospitals for fear of running up massive medical bills. Apollo was on Tuesday pulled up for not treating 33% patients free of cost. With Apollo's bed strength it should ideally have 200 beds where everything including medicines are provided by the hospital. The hospital for getting 15 acres land free of cost and an additional Rs 16 crore from the government is also supposed to have 40% OPD patients free which the HC found is also being violated. Health minister Kiran Walia said: "These hospitals have such an aura that poor patients are scared to go there. That is where these officials will come in. We will ask patients from government hospitals to meet designated officials in each hospital who will help them with their paperwork and see that they get their due.'' While Apollo's case is striking partly because of the huge numbers involved, one glance at the health department's records and it is clear that Apollo is not the only offender. It is clear that few of the 38-odd hospitals who were given land at concessional rates bother to inform the health department about the status of these free beds and as health department sources point out, the government's initiatives to get the information have not traditionally been very aggressive. This, despite the fact that the boards of all these hospitals have the chief secretary, finance secretary and health secretary as members. As many as 16 hospitals including well-known names like Dharamshila Hospital and Research Centre, Jaipur Golden Hospital and Sunderlal Jain Charitable Hospital have not submitted details of the occupancy status of free beds. Health department sources say there is usually a "happy understanding'' between hospitals and the government on free beds which being hospital's usually honour "requests'' from senior officials politicians etc and at times in their records show these patients as having been admitted under the free bed scheme. "This serves both sides and has been continuing all this while. In fact the case in which the ruling has come has been going on for many years now,'' explained an official. Health department's latest records for the status of free beds shows in Dharamshila all 20 are vacant, in Flt Rajan Dhall Hospital (Fortis) and Rockland, each of their 11 free beds are vacant, in Escorts Heart Institute and Research Centre 21 of 26 beds are vacant and in Jaipur Golden, all 26 free beds are vacant. Venu Eye Institute, however, is a welcome deviation with 63 free patients admitted against its quota of 42 beds. "One thing that Apollo really stood out in was that they made completely different setups for free beds where there was not enough medical care. This no other hospital did,'' said Walia who says it was her initiative after taking charge of the health department that brought Apollo to book. The PIL on which Tuesday's verdict came was filed by NGO Social Jurist in the mid-nineties.