© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Gross negligence manslaughter and hindsight
KY Yuen, MB, BS, MD1; Janice YC Lo, MB, BS, FRCPA2
1 Department of Microbiology, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
2 Centre for Health Protection, Department of Health, Hong Kong SAR Government, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr Janice YC Lo (janicelo@dh.gov.hk)
To the Editor—We read with interest the recent
Editorial on gross negligence manslaughter.1 The
third defendant in “DR” was employed by a clinic.
She intravenously administered to healthy clients
processed cells originally harvested from the client.
The deceased received infusion on 3 October 2012
and passed away on 10 October from multiorgan
failure due to septic shock caused by Mycobacterium
abscessus. The indictment provided, inter alia2:
1. the therapy was experimental for cancer patients, with unproven or uncertain efficacy;
2. there was no scientifically proven benefit on healthy patients;
3. the preparation involved prolonged culturing of blood cells with risk of contamination.
2. there was no scientifically proven benefit on healthy patients;
3. the preparation involved prolonged culturing of blood cells with risk of contamination.
Any intravenous infusion outside a research
setting must either be a registered pharmaceutical
product of good manufacturing practice standard
or comply with stringent quality requirements of a
national blood transfusion service. It is foreseeable
by any medical practitioner that lack of assurance
of sterility would result in microbial contamination.
Consideration through hindsight is not involved.
The Rose case is distinguishable.3 An
optometrist performed routine eye examination
for a 7-year-old on 15 February 2012, without
retinal examination, which would have revealed
papilloedema. Five months later, the boy passed away
suddenly. The Court of Appeal quashed the gross
negligence manslaughter conviction, as the boy was
asymptomatic “with no material pre-existing history”
in February; the significance of retinal examination
was only realised with hindsight.3 We respectfully
submit that the DR decision was consistent with
the established gross negligence manslaughter law, with no significant ambiguity. Medical practitioners
managing patients in accordance with standard
medical practices would unlikely face criminal
sanction.
Author contributions
Both authors contributed to the drafting of the letter and critical revision for important intellectual content. Both authors approved the final version for publication and take
responsibility for its accuracy and integrity.
Conflicts of interest
All authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
Funding/support
This letter received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
References
1. Leung GK. Medical manslaughter: the role of hindsight. Hong Kong Med J 2021;27:240-1. Crossref
2. HKSAR v Mak Wan Ling. HKCFI 3069; 2020. Available
from: https://legalref.judiciary.hk/lrs/common/search/search_result_detail_frame.jsp?DIS=132426&QS=%28mak%2Bwan%2Bling%29&TP=RS. Accessed 23 Aug 2021.
3. Regina v Rose HM. EWCA Crim 1168; 2017. Available from: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/1168.html. Accessed 23 Aug 2021.