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Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee

Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 1 WLR 582 is an English tort law case that lays down the typical rule for assessing the appropriate standard of reasonable care in negligence cases involving skilled professionals such as doctors. This rule is known as the Bolam test, and states that if a doctor reaches the standard of a responsible body of medical opinion, they are not negligent. Bolam was rejected in the 2015 Supreme Court decision of Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board in matters of informed consent.[1]

Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee
CourtHigh Court
Citation(s)[1957] 1 WLR 582
Keywords
Reasonable care

Facts edit

Mr Bolam was a voluntary patient at Friern Hospital, a mental health institution run by the Friern Hospital Management Committee. He agreed to undergo electro-convulsive therapy. He was not given any muscle relaxant, and his body was not restrained during the procedure. He flailed about violently before the procedure was stopped, and he suffered some serious injuries, including fractures of the acetabula. He sued the committee for compensation. He argued they were negligent for:

  1. not issuing relaxants
  2. not restraining him
  3. not warning him about the risks involved.

At this time, juries were still being used for tort cases in England and Wales, so the judge's role would be to sum up the law and then leave it for the jury to hold the defendant liable or not.[citation needed]

Judgment edit

McNair J at the first instance noted that expert witnesses had confirmed, much medical opinion was opposed to the use of relaxant drugs, and that manual restraints could sometimes increase the risk of fracture. Moreover, it was the common practice of the profession to not warn patients of the risk of treatment (when it is small) unless they are asked. He held that what was common practice in a particular profession was highly relevant to the standard of care required. A person falls below the appropriate standard, and is negligent, if he fails to do what a reasonable person would in the circumstances. But when a person professes to have professional skills, as doctors do, the standard of care must be higher. "It is just a question of expression", said McNair J.

"I myself would prefer to put it this way, that he is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art. I do not think there is much difference in sense. It is just a different way of expressing the same thought. Putting it the other way round, a man is not negligent, if he is acting in accordance with such a practice, merely because there is a body of opinion who would take a contrary view. At the same time, that does not mean that a medical man can obstinately and pig-headedly carry on with some old technique if it has been proved to be contrary to what is really substantially the whole of informed medical opinion. Otherwise you might get men today saying: “I do not believe in anaesthetics. I do not believe in antiseptics. I am going to continue to do my surgery in the way it was done in the eighteenth century.” That clearly would be wrong."[2]

In this case, the jury delivered a verdict in favour of the defendant hospital. Given the general medical opinions about what was acceptable electro-shock practice, they had not been negligent in the way they carried out the treatment. That passage is quoted very frequently, and has served as the basic rule for professional negligence over the last fifty years.

Significance edit

Bolam was re-examined and revised in the 2015 Supreme Court decision of Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board.[3]

The law distinguishes between liability flowing from acts and omissions, and liability flowing from misstatements. The Bolam principle addresses the first element and may be formulated as a rule that a doctor, nurse or other health professional is not negligent if he or she acts in accordance with a practice accepted at the time as proper by a responsible body of medical opinion, even though some other practitioners adopt a different practice. In addition, Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v Heller & Partners Ltd. [1964] AC 465 created the rule of "reasonable reliance" by the claimant on the professional judgment of the defendant.

"Where a person is so placed that others could reasonably rely upon his judgment or his skill or upon his ability to make careful inquiry, and a person takes it upon himself to give information or advice to, or allows his information or advice to be passed on to, another person who, as he knows or should know, will place reliance upon it, then a duty of care will arise."[4]

Because of the nature of the relationship between a medical practitioner and a patient, it is reasonable for the patient to rely on the advice given by the practitioner. Thus, Bolam applies to all the acts and omissions constituting diagnosis and consequential treatment, and Hedley Byrne applies to all advisory activities involving the communication of diagnosis and prognosis, giving of advice on both therapeutic and non-therapeutic options for treatment, and disclosure of relevant information to obtain informed consent.

  • Barnett v Chelsea & Kensington Hospital [1968] 1 All ER 1068. Three men attended at the emergency department but the casualty officer, who was himself unwell, did not see them, advising that they should go home and call their own doctors. One of the men died some hours later. The post mortem showed arsenical poisoning which was a rare cause of death. Even if the deceased had been examined and admitted for treatment, there was little or no chance that the only effective antidote would have been administered to him in time. Although the hospital had been negligent in failing to examine the men, there was no proof that the deceased's death was caused by that negligence.
  • Whitehouse v Jordan [1981] 1 All ER 267: The claimant was a baby who suffered severe brain damage after a difficult birth. The defendant, a senior hospital registrar, was supervising delivery in a high-risk pregnancy. After the mother had been in labour for 22 hours, the defendant used forceps to assist the delivery. The Lords found that the doctor's standard of care did not fall below that of a reasonable doctor in the circumstances and so the baby was awarded no compensation.
  • Sidaway v Bethlem Royal Hospital Governors [1985] AC 871: The claimant suffered from pain in her neck, right shoulder, and arms. Her neurosurgeon took her consent for cervical cord decompression, but did not include in his explanation the fact that in less than 1% of the cases, the said decompression caused paraplegia. She developed paraplegia after the spinal operation. Rejecting her claim for damages, the court held that consent did not require an elaborate explanation of remote side effects. In dissent, Lord Scarman said that the Bolam principle should not apply to the issue of informed consent and that a doctor should have a duty to tell the patient of the inherent and material risk of the treatment proposed.
  • Maynard v West Midlands Regional Health Authority [1985] 1 All ER 635. The patient presented with symptoms of tuberculosis but both the consultant physician and the consultant surgeon took the view that Hodgkin's disease, carcinoma, and sarcoidosis were also possibilities, the first of which if present would have required remedial steps to be taken in its early stages. Instead of waiting for the results of the sputum tests, the consultants carried out a mediastinoscopy to get a biopsy. The inherent risk of damage was to the left laryngeal recurrent nerve, even if the operation was properly done. In the event, only tuberculosis was confirmed. Unfortunately, the risk became a reality and the patient suffered a paralysis of the left vocal cord. The decision of the physician and the surgeon to proceed was said by their expert peers to be reasonable in all the circumstances.
  • Hotson v East Berkshire Area Health Authority [1987] 2 All ER 909. The extent of the hip injuries to a 13-year-old boy was not diagnosed for five days. By the age of 20 years, there was deformity of the hip joint, restricted mobility and permanent disability. The judge found that even if the diagnosis had been made correctly, there was still a 75% risk of the plaintiff's disability developing, but that the medical staff's breach of duty had turned that risk into an inevitability, thereby denying the plaintiff a 25% chance of a good recovery. Damages included an amount of £11,500 representing 25% of the full value of the damages awardable for the plaintiff's disability. On appeal to the Lords, the question was whether the cause of the injury was the fall or the health authority's negligence in delaying treatment, since if the fall had caused the injury the negligence of the authority was irrelevant in regard to the plaintiff's disability. Because the judge had held that on the balance of probabilities, even correct diagnosis and treatment would not have prevented the disability from occurring, it followed that the plaintiff had failed on the issue of causation. It was therefore irrelevant to consider the question of damages.
  • Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority [1988] AC 1074 The defendant hospital, initially acting through an inexperienced junior doctor, negligently administered excessive oxygen during the post-natal care of a premature child who subsequently became blind. Excessive oxygen was, according to the medical evidence, one of five possible factors that could have led to blindness and, therefore, the Lords found that it was impossible to say that it had caused, or materially contributed, to the injury and the claim was dismissed. In a minority view, Mustill LJ. argued that if it is established that conduct of a certain kind materially adds to the risk of injury, if the defendant engages in such conduct in breach of a common law duty, and if the injury is the kind to which the conduct related, then the defendant is taken to have caused the injury even though the existence and extent of the contribution made by the breach cannot be ascertained.
  • Bolitho v City and Hackney Health Authority [1997] 4 All ER 771: A two-year-old boy suffered brain damage as a result of the bronchial air passages becoming blocked leading to cardiac arrest. It was agreed that the only course of action to prevent the damage was to have the boy intubated. The doctor who negligently failed to attend to the boy said that she would not have intubated had she attended. There was evidence from one expert witness that he would not have intubated whereas five other experts said that they would have done so. The House of Lords held that there would have to be a logical basis for the opinion not to intubate. This would involve a weighing of risks against benefit in order to achieve a defensible conclusion. This means that a judge will be entitled to choose between two bodies of expert opinion and to reject an opinion which is 'logically indefensible'. This has been interpreted as being a situation where the Court sets the law not the profession.
  • Albrighton v RPA Hospital,[5] where a patient in Royal Prince Alfred Hospital who had been born with a spinal problem had her spinal cord totally severed leaving her a paraplegic. Reynolds JA rejected the proposition that doctors could not be negligent if they acted in accordance with the usual and customary practice and procedure in their “medical community”, holding that "it is not the law that, if all or most of the medical practitioners in Sydney habitually fail to take an available precaution to avoid foreseeable risk of injury to their patients, then none can be found guilty of negligence".[6]
  • F v R,[7] Where Chief Justice King said, "In many cases an approved professional practice as to disclosure will be decisive. But professions may adopt unreasonable practices. Practices may develop in professions, particularly as to disclosure, not because they serve the interests of the clients, but because they protect the interests or convenience of members of the profession. The court has an obligation to scrutinize professional practices to ensure that they accord with the standard of reasonableness imposed by the law. A practice as to disclosure approved and adopted by a profession or section of it may be in many cases the determining consideration as to what is reasonable. On the facts of a particular case the answer to the question whether the defendant’s conduct conformed to approved professional practice may decide the issue of negligence, and the test has been posed in such terms in a number of cases. The ultimate question, however, is not whether the defendant’s conduct accords with the practices of his profession or some part of it, but whether it conforms to the standard of reasonable care demanded by the law. That is a question for the court and the duty of deciding it cannot be delegated to any profession or group in the community."

Misfeasance edit

Where it can be shown that the decision-maker was not merely negligent, but acted with "malice", the tort of "misfeasance in public office" may give rise to a remedy. An example might be a prison doctor refusing to treat a prisoner because he or she had previously been difficult or abusive. Although proof of spite or ill-will may make a decision-maker's act unlawful, actual malice in the sense of an act intended to do harm to a particular individual, is not necessary. It will be enough that the decision-maker knew that he or she was acting unlawfully and that this would cause injury to some person, or was recklessly indifferent to that result.

  • Palmer v Tees Health Authority [1998] All ER 180; (1999) Lloyd’s Medical Reports 151 (CA) A psychiatric out-patient, who was known to be dangerous, murdered a four-year-old child. The claim was that the defendant had failed to diagnose that there was a real, substantial, and foreseeable risk of the patient committing serious sexual offences against children and that, as a result, it had failed to provide any adequate treatment for him to reduce the risk of him committing such offences and/or to prevent him from being released from the hospital while he was at risk of committing such offences. But the court struck out the claim on the grounds that there was no duty of care towards the child, as any child, at any time, was in the same danger. Furthermore, as the patient did not suffer from a treatable mental illness, there was no legal right to either treat or detain the person.
  • Akenzua v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2002] EWCA Civ 1470, (2003) 1 WLR 741 where a dangerous criminal due to be deported, was released by the police/immigration services to act as an informant and killed a member of the public. The Lords held that if a public officer knows that his or her acts and omissions will probably injure a person or class of persons, the public body (or the state) will be liable for the consequences. In this case, it was arguable that there had been an illegal use of the power to permit the deportee to remain at liberty and that the officials exercising that power must have known that it was illegal. Given the criminal's record, the officials must at least have been reckless as to the consequences. For these purposes, it was not necessary to prove foresight that a particular individual might be at risk: it was enough that it was foreseeable that the criminal would harm somebody. Palmer was distinguishable because the relevant officials had the power to detain and deport the dangerous person.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ [2015] UKSC 11
  2. ^ [1957] 1 W.L.R. 582, 587
  3. ^ [2015] UKSC 11
  4. ^ [1964] AC 465, at ???
  5. ^ Albrighton v RPA Hospital (1980) 2 NSWLR 542. Supreme Court (NSW, Australia).
  6. ^ Albrighton v Royal Prince Alfred Hospital [1980] 2 NSWLR 542 at pp 562-3 (29 September 1980) NSW Court of Appeal.
  7. ^ F v R (1983) 33 SASR 189 Full Court Supreme Court (SA, Australia).

References edit

  • Brazier, M. (2003). Medicine, Patients and the Law. Third Edition, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.
  • Jones, M. (2003). Medical Negligence. Third Edition London: Sweet & Maxwell.
  • Kennedy, I & Grubb, A. (2000). Medical Law. Third Edition. London: Butterworths.
  • Mason, J. K. & Laurie, G. T. (2003). "Misfeasance in Public Office: An Emerging Medical Law Tort?" 11 Medical Law Review 194.
  • Mason, J. K. & Laurie, G. T. (2005). Mason and McCall-Smith's 'Law and Medical Ethics. Seventh Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Robertson, Gerald B. (1981). "Whitehouse v Jordan: Medical Negligence Retried". 44 Modern Law Review 457–461.

External links edit

  • The Bolam judgment.

bolam, friern, hospital, management, committee, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, consisting, only, original, research, should, removed, february, 2023, learn. This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee 1957 1 WLR 582 is an English tort law case that lays down the typical rule for assessing the appropriate standard of reasonable care in negligence cases involving skilled professionals such as doctors This rule is known as the Bolam test and states that if a doctor reaches the standard of a responsible body of medical opinion they are not negligent Bolam was rejected in the 2015 Supreme Court decision of Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board in matters of informed consent 1 Bolam v Friern Hospital Management CommitteeCourtHigh CourtCitation s 1957 1 WLR 582KeywordsReasonable care Contents 1 Facts 2 Judgment 3 Significance 3 1 Misfeasance 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksFacts editMr Bolam was a voluntary patient at Friern Hospital a mental health institution run by the Friern Hospital Management Committee He agreed to undergo electro convulsive therapy He was not given any muscle relaxant and his body was not restrained during the procedure He flailed about violently before the procedure was stopped and he suffered some serious injuries including fractures of the acetabula He sued the committee for compensation He argued they were negligent for not issuing relaxants not restraining him not warning him about the risks involved At this time juries were still being used for tort cases in England and Wales so the judge s role would be to sum up the law and then leave it for the jury to hold the defendant liable or not citation needed Judgment editMcNair J at the first instance noted that expert witnesses had confirmed much medical opinion was opposed to the use of relaxant drugs and that manual restraints could sometimes increase the risk of fracture Moreover it was the common practice of the profession to not warn patients of the risk of treatment when it is small unless they are asked He held that what was common practice in a particular profession was highly relevant to the standard of care required A person falls below the appropriate standard and is negligent if he fails to do what a reasonable person would in the circumstances But when a person professes to have professional skills as doctors do the standard of care must be higher It is just a question of expression said McNair J I myself would prefer to put it this way that he is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art I do not think there is much difference in sense It is just a different way of expressing the same thought Putting it the other way round a man is not negligent if he is acting in accordance with such a practice merely because there is a body of opinion who would take a contrary view At the same time that does not mean that a medical man can obstinately and pig headedly carry on with some old technique if it has been proved to be contrary to what is really substantially the whole of informed medical opinion Otherwise you might get men today saying I do not believe in anaesthetics I do not believe in antiseptics I am going to continue to do my surgery in the way it was done in the eighteenth century That clearly would be wrong 2 In this case the jury delivered a verdict in favour of the defendant hospital Given the general medical opinions about what was acceptable electro shock practice they had not been negligent in the way they carried out the treatment That passage is quoted very frequently and has served as the basic rule for professional negligence over the last fifty years Significance editBolam was re examined and revised in the 2015 Supreme Court decision of Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board 3 The law distinguishes between liability flowing from acts and omissions and liability flowing from misstatements The Bolam principle addresses the first element and may be formulated as a rule that a doctor nurse or other health professional is not negligent if he or she acts in accordance with a practice accepted at the time as proper by a responsible body of medical opinion even though some other practitioners adopt a different practice In addition Hedley Byrne amp Co Ltd v Heller amp Partners Ltd 1964 AC 465 created the rule of reasonable reliance by the claimant on the professional judgment of the defendant Where a person is so placed that others could reasonably rely upon his judgment or his skill or upon his ability to make careful inquiry and a person takes it upon himself to give information or advice to or allows his information or advice to be passed on to another person who as he knows or should know will place reliance upon it then a duty of care will arise 4 Because of the nature of the relationship between a medical practitioner and a patient it is reasonable for the patient to rely on the advice given by the practitioner Thus Bolam applies to all the acts and omissions constituting diagnosis and consequential treatment and Hedley Byrne applies to all advisory activities involving the communication of diagnosis and prognosis giving of advice on both therapeutic and non therapeutic options for treatment and disclosure of relevant information to obtain informed consent Barnett v Chelsea amp Kensington Hospital 1968 1 All ER 1068 Three men attended at the emergency department but the casualty officer who was himself unwell did not see them advising that they should go home and call their own doctors One of the men died some hours later The post mortem showed arsenical poisoning which was a rare cause of death Even if the deceased had been examined and admitted for treatment there was little or no chance that the only effective antidote would have been administered to him in time Although the hospital had been negligent in failing to examine the men there was no proof that the deceased s death was caused by that negligence Whitehouse v Jordan 1981 1 All ER 267 The claimant was a baby who suffered severe brain damage after a difficult birth The defendant a senior hospital registrar was supervising delivery in a high risk pregnancy After the mother had been in labour for 22 hours the defendant used forceps to assist the delivery The Lords found that the doctor s standard of care did not fall below that of a reasonable doctor in the circumstances and so the baby was awarded no compensation Sidaway v Bethlem Royal Hospital Governors 1985 AC 871 The claimant suffered from pain in her neck right shoulder and arms Her neurosurgeon took her consent for cervical cord decompression but did not include in his explanation the fact that in less than 1 of the cases the said decompression caused paraplegia She developed paraplegia after the spinal operation Rejecting her claim for damages the court held that consent did not require an elaborate explanation of remote side effects In dissent Lord Scarman said that the Bolam principle should not apply to the issue of informed consent and that a doctor should have a duty to tell the patient of the inherent and material risk of the treatment proposed Maynard v West Midlands Regional Health Authority 1985 1 All ER 635 The patient presented with symptoms of tuberculosis but both the consultant physician and the consultant surgeon took the view that Hodgkin s disease carcinoma and sarcoidosis were also possibilities the first of which if present would have required remedial steps to be taken in its early stages Instead of waiting for the results of the sputum tests the consultants carried out a mediastinoscopy to get a biopsy The inherent risk of damage was to the left laryngeal recurrent nerve even if the operation was properly done In the event only tuberculosis was confirmed Unfortunately the risk became a reality and the patient suffered a paralysis of the left vocal cord The decision of the physician and the surgeon to proceed was said by their expert peers to be reasonable in all the circumstances Hotson v East Berkshire Area Health Authority 1987 2 All ER 909 The extent of the hip injuries to a 13 year old boy was not diagnosed for five days By the age of 20 years there was deformity of the hip joint restricted mobility and permanent disability The judge found that even if the diagnosis had been made correctly there was still a 75 risk of the plaintiff s disability developing but that the medical staff s breach of duty had turned that risk into an inevitability thereby denying the plaintiff a 25 chance of a good recovery Damages included an amount of 11 500 representing 25 of the full value of the damages awardable for the plaintiff s disability On appeal to the Lords the question was whether the cause of the injury was the fall or the health authority s negligence in delaying treatment since if the fall had caused the injury the negligence of the authority was irrelevant in regard to the plaintiff s disability Because the judge had held that on the balance of probabilities even correct diagnosis and treatment would not have prevented the disability from occurring it followed that the plaintiff had failed on the issue of causation It was therefore irrelevant to consider the question of damages Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority 1988 AC 1074 The defendant hospital initially acting through an inexperienced junior doctor negligently administered excessive oxygen during the post natal care of a premature child who subsequently became blind Excessive oxygen was according to the medical evidence one of five possible factors that could have led to blindness and therefore the Lords found that it was impossible to say that it had caused or materially contributed to the injury and the claim was dismissed In a minority view Mustill LJ argued that if it is established that conduct of a certain kind materially adds to the risk of injury if the defendant engages in such conduct in breach of a common law duty and if the injury is the kind to which the conduct related then the defendant is taken to have caused the injury even though the existence and extent of the contribution made by the breach cannot be ascertained Bolitho v City and Hackney Health Authority 1997 4 All ER 771 A two year old boy suffered brain damage as a result of the bronchial air passages becoming blocked leading to cardiac arrest It was agreed that the only course of action to prevent the damage was to have the boy intubated The doctor who negligently failed to attend to the boy said that she would not have intubated had she attended There was evidence from one expert witness that he would not have intubated whereas five other experts said that they would have done so The House of Lords held that there would have to be a logical basis for the opinion not to intubate This would involve a weighing of risks against benefit in order to achieve a defensible conclusion This means that a judge will be entitled to choose between two bodies of expert opinion and to reject an opinion which is logically indefensible This has been interpreted as being a situation where the Court sets the law not the profession Albrighton v RPA Hospital 5 where a patient in Royal Prince Alfred Hospital who had been born with a spinal problem had her spinal cord totally severed leaving her a paraplegic Reynolds JA rejected the proposition that doctors could not be negligent if they acted in accordance with the usual and customary practice and procedure in their medical community holding that it is not the law that if all or most of the medical practitioners in Sydney habitually fail to take an available precaution to avoid foreseeable risk of injury to their patients then none can be found guilty of negligence 6 F v R 7 Where Chief Justice King said In many cases an approved professional practice as to disclosure will be decisive But professions may adopt unreasonable practices Practices may develop in professions particularly as to disclosure not because they serve the interests of the clients but because they protect the interests or convenience of members of the profession The court has an obligation to scrutinize professional practices to ensure that they accord with the standard of reasonableness imposed by the law A practice as to disclosure approved and adopted by a profession or section of it may be in many cases the determining consideration as to what is reasonable On the facts of a particular case the answer to the question whether the defendant s conduct conformed to approved professional practice may decide the issue of negligence and the test has been posed in such terms in a number of cases The ultimate question however is not whether the defendant s conduct accords with the practices of his profession or some part of it but whether it conforms to the standard of reasonable care demanded by the law That is a question for the court and the duty of deciding it cannot be delegated to any profession or group in the community Misfeasance edit Where it can be shown that the decision maker was not merely negligent but acted with malice the tort of misfeasance in public office may give rise to a remedy An example might be a prison doctor refusing to treat a prisoner because he or she had previously been difficult or abusive Although proof of spite or ill will may make a decision maker s act unlawful actual malice in the sense of an act intended to do harm to a particular individual is not necessary It will be enough that the decision maker knew that he or she was acting unlawfully and that this would cause injury to some person or was recklessly indifferent to that result Palmer v Tees Health Authority 1998 All ER 180 1999 Lloyd s Medical Reports 151 CA A psychiatric out patient who was known to be dangerous murdered a four year old child The claim was that the defendant had failed to diagnose that there was a real substantial and foreseeable risk of the patient committing serious sexual offences against children and that as a result it had failed to provide any adequate treatment for him to reduce the risk of him committing such offences and or to prevent him from being released from the hospital while he was at risk of committing such offences But the court struck out the claim on the grounds that there was no duty of care towards the child as any child at any time was in the same danger Furthermore as the patient did not suffer from a treatable mental illness there was no legal right to either treat or detain the person Akenzua v Secretary of State for the Home Department 2002 EWCA Civ 1470 2003 1 WLR 741 where a dangerous criminal due to be deported was released by the police immigration services to act as an informant and killed a member of the public The Lords held that if a public officer knows that his or her acts and omissions will probably injure a person or class of persons the public body or the state will be liable for the consequences In this case it was arguable that there had been an illegal use of the power to permit the deportee to remain at liberty and that the officials exercising that power must have known that it was illegal Given the criminal s record the officials must at least have been reckless as to the consequences For these purposes it was not necessary to prove foresight that a particular individual might be at risk it was enough that it was foreseeable that the criminal would harm somebody Palmer was distinguishable because the relevant officials had the power to detain and deport the dangerous person See also editEnglish tort law Breach of duty in English law F v R Shakoor v SituNotes edit 2015 UKSC 11 1957 1 W L R 582 587 2015 UKSC 11 1964 AC 465 at Albrighton v RPA Hospital 1980 2 NSWLR 542 Supreme Court NSW Australia Albrighton v Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 1980 2 NSWLR 542 at pp 562 3 29 September 1980 NSW Court of Appeal F v R 1983 33 SASR 189 Full Court Supreme Court SA Australia References editBrazier M 2003 Medicine Patients and the Law Third Edition Harmondsworth Penguin Books Jones M 2003 Medical Negligence Third Edition London Sweet amp Maxwell Kennedy I amp Grubb A 2000 Medical Law Third Edition London Butterworths Mason J K amp Laurie G T 2003 Misfeasance in Public Office An Emerging Medical Law Tort 11 Medical Law Review 194 Mason J K amp Laurie G T 2005 Mason and McCall Smith s Law and Medical Ethics Seventh Edition Oxford Oxford University Press Robertson Gerald B 1981 Whitehouse v Jordan Medical Negligence Retried 44 Modern Law Review 457 461 External links editThe Bolam judgment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee amp oldid 1157793614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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