In Queensland, the law accepts that medical practitioners may need to make difficult medical decisions under significant pressure. However, medical negligence is more than just a simple mistake in diagnosis or treatment provision. There are three general elements that need to be proven in a negligence claim.
Duty of Care
A medical practitioner such as a doctor has a duty to exercise reasonable care, skill and judgment in providing treatment to patients. This also includes examinations, diagnosing and providing information to their patients. Many consent forms specify an acknowledgement of the stated risks and complications that may arise from the provision of a given treatment or operation. However, this does not relieve the medical practitioner from their responsibility to provide reasonable care, skill and judgement.
Thus, to prove medical knowledge, a critical element that is required is evidence that the medical practitioner’s actions fell below the standard of care that is reasonably expected from a similar medical professional. In other words, if the medical practitioner’s actions are considered to be acceptable according to the opinion of a large number of respected medical practitioners in a similar field of practice, it may be difficult to prove the claim.
Causation
Another element to prove in a medical negligence claim is that the doctor’s performance caused the harmful result on a balance of probabilities. In other words, you need to establish to the courts that more likely than not, the doctor’s actions were responsible for the injuries that you sustained. Read the rest of the entry...
