Sunday 23 January 2011

What is Clinical/Medical Negligence?


Doctors and nurses are generally regarded as providing excellent, caring service for their patients. Nevertheless, if you, your spouse or child, have been injured, or if you are the dependant or child of a patient who died, as a result of medical treatment you are, at the very least, entitled to an explanation. A treating doctor, in fact, is required by his governing body, the General Medical Council to inform a patient when that treatment has gone wrong.

Where the injury or death was caused or contributed to by the breach of a duty of care committed in the course of the provision of clinical or medical services, including dental or nursing services, you and/or your child may be entitled to financial compensation for what is termed "clinical negligence", formerly – and often still – described as “medical negligence”.

Personal injuries, including brain damage and psychological injury such as nervous shock, or death can occur in all clinical specialities.

Medical claims can arise out of, for example, accident and emergency, anaesthetics, cancer treatment, cardiothoracic surgery, cardiology, gastroenterology, general practice, keyhole surgery, mental health, neurosurgery, obstetrics and gynaecology, oncology, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, paediatrics, plastic surgery, psychiatry, radiology, sterilisation, urology, vascular surgery and many more.

Doctors have been found in breach of a duty of care for, among other things, failed or delayed diagnosis, failure to warn of risks in treatment, failure to obtain proper consent to treatment, medication errors, careless surgical procedures, delayed referral to specialists. Negligence can also arise out of system errors in the hospital where the treatment took place. Most cases concern registered medical practitioners (doctors and surgeons). But similar principles apply to dentists, midwives, nurses, physiotherapists, psychologists and psychiatrists.

New issues are constantly arising, for example, the retention of organs and tissues following post-mortems, use of unsterilised instruments, early failure of replacement hips, misinterpreted breast screening and cervical smear testing, liability for hospital-acquired infections. Clinical negligence can overlap with another area where litigation has expanded in the last two decades: consumer safety involving product liability for drugs and vaccines, for example, where a general practitioner is accused of administering an inoculation despite contra-indications.

A claim against a medical professional for injuries arising out of a medical accident is completely different from a claim for personal injuries caused in, say, a road traffic accident. In the latter case it is usually straightforward to establish whether or not somebody was at fault and whether any injuries were suffered as a result. But to succeed in a clinical negligence claim you must prove, through the evidence of medical experts qualified in the speciality concerned, that, on a balance of probabilities (ie, it was more probable than not)

(1) that there were serious errors in your medical treatment which no competent doctor would have made; and

(2) that those errors caused, or materially contributed to, the injury you are complaining of.

At MJP we have experts who can help and advise in this field. We have over 30 years of experience in handling cases of this type.  We will be happy to provide a FREE initial consultation. Call Sara on 01603877000 or email Sara at sarawestwood@m-j-p.co.uk

Latest iPhone 5 Rumours

According to the Chinese Economic Daily News , with the exception of Qualcomm chipsets - which would replace the current Infineon chipsets in the iPhone 4 - Apple's sticking with the same suppliers for the 2011 iPhone 5G components.
We'd expect the basics of the iPhone 5 specs to include - more memory, faster processor, more storage.

The specs? A new antenna, 1.2GHz processor and a larger screen: 3.7" instead of 3.5". The iPhone 5 may also be made from a new kind of alloy, or maybe meat



For all the latest iPhone rumours visit Tech Radar: http://bit.ly/dWB5sI 

Bank of England has concern over the low number of mortgages

In the Daily Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/houseprices/8275708/Bank-of-Englands-Adam-Posen-warns-over-lack-of-mortgage-lending.html )today is news on how the Bank of England has Concern about how the shortage of mortgages is likely to have an adverse impact on the housing market.

'Bank of England policymaker Adam Posen has told Bloomberg that he sees a “downside” risk to the UK housing market due to the lack of credit for first-time buyers and “very low” levels of home sales.

House prices rebounded last year from their worst slump since the early 1990s, as the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee held the interest rate at a record low of 0.5pc, however demand for mortgages weakened. Data last week from the Council of Mortgage Lenders showed mortgage advances for 2010 sunk to their lowest level in a decade.

“You look at the difficulty many first-time buyers or younger people have in getting mortgages [and the] very low volume of transactions – these to me are things saying ‘I am much more worried about a downside risk to the housing market from here than any further appreciation,’” Mr Posen told Bloomberg.

“My view is two things have supported the UK housing market in the last couple of years,” Mr Posen said. “One is our interest-rate cuts and quantitative easing directly affecting mortgage affordability” and the second that the level of UK homebuilding was “relatively small for the size of the economy compared to Spain or Ireland or the US”.

“You have both a demand factor through aggressive monetary ease and a supply factor in that the oversupply was much less,” he said. “That to me is a very straightforward explanation for why housing prices have been relatively resilient.”

Mr Posen has repeatedly urged his Bank of England colleagues not "overreact" to inflation remaining over target by increasing interest rates and in recent months has argued for policy to move in the opposite direction – to provide further stimulus'.

Good news for the first time buyer?

A recent study suggests the time is now right fro the first time buyer to begin looking to join the housing ladder. 


A study by Lombard Street Research (LSR) and the Daily Telegraph found that housing affordability is currently at record levels, with some property prices at their most undervalued level since the mid-1990s.

This comes after the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said recently that it expects the cost of a home to drop by at least two per cent and perhaps up to five per cent over the course of 2011.

However, LSR warned that buying conditions could get harder if the Bank of England raises interest rates as is widely anticipated, meaning that mortgage lending will get tighter.

This could cancel out savings to be made on properties, with the organisation suggesting that now may be a good time to buy for those with available deposits and other funds.

Daily Express Report on how Facebook is cited in Divorce cases

FACEBOOK is to blame for more and more marital break-ups, according to a divorce lawyer.
Emma Patel, head of family law at solicitors Hart Scales & Hodges, said all 30 divorces she has dealt with in the past nine months have involved the social networking website.
She said the site acted as a “virtual third party” in splits.
“Its huge popularity as well as the lure of sites like Second Life, Illicit Encounters and Friends Reunited are tempting couples to cheat on each other.”


Read more: http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/224607/Facebook-is-cited-in-divorcesFacebook-is-cited-in-divorces#ixzz1BqOCgpDo

Apple's 10 Million App Store Download

UK-based Gail Davis of Orpington became the winner of a $10,000 App Store gift card after she dowloaded the 10 billionth download from Apple's App Store at around 10:30 yesterday morning.

Davis downloaded an app called Paper Glider from a small UK-based iPhone app developer called Neon Play. Paper Glider is currently the most popular free iPhone app in the UK.

More than seven billion apps have been dowloaded in the last year alone, an astounding rate of growth given that it took Apple over 18 months to get to the one billion app milestone.

The App store was opened in July 2008 and has since been widely emulated by rivals such as Nokia, Google, Blackberry and Microsoft.

Philip Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing, said in a press release that the App Store had surpassed Apple's wildest dream.

It is therefore not a surprise that the company has decided to extend the service to the Mac desktop environment through the recently launched Mac Store.


Read more: http://www.itproportal.com/

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