Hong Kong Med J 2023 Feb;29(1):4–5 | Epub 8 Feb 2023
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
EDITORIAL
Medical manslaughter in Hong Kong: what now?
Gilberto KK Leung, FHKAM (Surgery), LLM
Department of Surgery, School of Clinical Medicine, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Prof Gilberto KK Leung (gilberto@hku.hk)
Healthcare professionals are not above the law. In the event of substandard medical care that resulted in
patient death, it is only right that society and families
be provided opportunities to seek explanation,
redress, justice, and closure. Civil proceedings and
professional regulatory mechanisms are commonly
pursued avenues recognised by healthcare
professionals as proportionate; criminal law
intervention is justified in some circumstances, but
it is a more unsettling approach.1
Criminal law intervention is unsettling not so
much because of the actual imposition of criminal
penalty where deserved but because of the very
thought that one could be a single mistake away
from being charged for a crime, as well as the adverse
effects that such fear may have on professional
culture, clinical practice, and patient welfare. It is
also unsettling because of uncertainties regarding
the threshold for prosecution.
Despite criticisms concerning its circularity,
vagueness, and the arguable lack of requirement
for a clearly culpable mens rea, the offence of gross
negligence manslaughter (GNM) has survived
repeated calls for legal reform, and it continues to be
applied in ‘medical manslaughter’ cases.1 As for other
crimes, the decision to prosecute must consider two
factors: first, whether there is a reasonable chance
of securing a conviction, and second, whether the
public interest requires a prosecution to be pursued.2
The first factor is related to the determination
of whether there is sufficient evidence to prove
all ingredients of the offence. As established in
the British case of R v Rose, a conviction of GNM
requires the court to be satisfied that (in addition
to the basic elements of civil negligence) it was
reasonably foreseeable to the suspect that the breach
of duty would give rise to a ‘serious and obvious risk
of death’, and that the circumstances of the breach
were ‘truly exceptionally bad and so reprehensible…
that [the breach] amounted to gross negligence and
required criminal sanction’. An ‘obvious’ risk must
be clear and unambiguous based on knowledge
available at the time of the breach, rather than
one which might become apparent on further
investigation. Importantly, a recognisable risk of
something serious is not the same as a recognisable
risk of death.3 Whether and how these principles
might have been followed in other common law
jurisdictions remain to be discovered. A hypothetical question to ask could be whether the circumstances
of an inadvertent omission of drug prescription are
truly exceptionally bad and so reprehensible as to
warrant prosecution.
The second factor is related to the fundamental
principle that not all offences for which there
is sufficient evidence should automatically be
prosecuted; the public interest must require
such an approach. When evaluating the public
interest balance, an inexhaustive list of factors are
considered, subject to the circumstances of the case.
The exercise of this discretionary power is complex
and demanding; even experienced prosecutors may
have difficulty agreeing on a consistent approach
to GNM cases.4 It is of note that whilst the public
interest is unlikely to allow of a disposal less than
prosecution when the victim has suffered significant
harm, the suspect’s level of culpability should also
be considered. The problem is that an ‘honest’
mistake—made without intent to cause harm or
recklessness as to the risk of harm—is exactly what
might be caught (or not) under the arguably elastic
and arbitrary scope of GNM.
Because GNM is not an offence specific
to medical cases, there is no reason to expect
routine consideration regarding the impact of
criminalising medical error on the broader public
interest. However, poor morale, staff attrition, loss
of trust, the rise of defensive medicine, and the
suppression of a learning culture are highly plausible
consequences of over-criminalisation with serious
implications for quality of care and patient safety.1
In the United Kingdom, a series of high-profile cases
caused sufficient public outcry that the Secretary
of State for Health and Social Care instigated a
rapid policy review into the application of GNM in
healthcare5; another review was later commissioned
by the General Medical Council.6 Neither review was
intended to recommend changes in the law; both
were undertaken to identify potential improvements
within the existing legal framework.
Both reviews found that, although the threshold
for prosecution has been set appropriately high
following the decision in R v Rose, there remained a
perception among healthcare professionals that the
legal test has not been applied in a consistent manner,
and that individuals were under investigation
where the prospect of prosecution or conviction
may be low. Both panels saw a need to enhance the transparency and understanding of the law, as well
as the threshold for prosecution so as to provide
assurance regarding how decisions are made. A
series of guidelines was subsequently issued by the
Director of Public Prosecutions.
The reviews also highlighted the central role of
expert opinion in triggering an investigation and in
determining whether a case should be prosecuted.
Because problems with expert testimony may not
be uncovered until trial or appeal, an unsound
or biased opinion could potentially subject a
healthcare professional to otherwise avoidable
legal proceedings. Indeed, questions were raised
regarding the use of expert witness opinion during
the pre-trial stage, the competence and conduct of
some experts, the experts’ understanding of the law,
and their understanding of their duties to the court.
In Hong Kong, a training course for expert witnesses
is available through the Hong Kong Academy
of Medicine. Formal mechanisms to ensure the
recruitment of competent expert witnesses, the
engagement of a dedicated panel of 'super-experts'
at the pre-trial stage, and the scrutiny of opinions
regarding quality would be welcome.
Finally, the reviews emphasised the importance
of maintaining an open and just culture of candour
and learning. Families who feel that they have been
denied information are more likely to seek answers
through legal processes; thus, the method in which
healthcare service providers manage the aftermath
of a patient’s death should be carefully considered.
Legal protection may be given to statements that
arise during internal proceedings, thereby creating a
safe space for healthcare professionals to discuss and
learn from their mistakes.
There is no doubt the criminal law serves
important functions in safeguarding patient welfare,
but it is also a blunt instrument that can destroy
the fabrics and ideals of a healthcare system if not
applied judiciously. Medical manslaughter cases
should be handled with exceptional care—not
because healthcare professionals are an exception
to the law, but because of the exceptional damage that a single case can do. Neither medicine nor the law
operates in a vacuum. Both earn society’s trust and
deference through not their power but the good they
do, and both should reckon with each other’s unique
strengths and values, limitations, and challenges.
Now that the likelihood of what happened in the
United Kingdom being repeated in other places is all
but real, it will be up to policymakers to determine
how best to calm nerves and learn from lessons
learned elsewhere.
Author contributions
The author is solely responsible for drafting of the manuscript, approved the final version for publication, and takes
responsibility for its accuracy and integrity.
Funding/support
This editorial received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Declaration
The author has disclosed no conflicts of interest.
References
1. Leung GK. Medical manslaughter in Hong Kong—how, why, and why not. Hong Kong Med J 2018;24:384-90. Crossref
2. Department of Justice, Hong Kong SAR Government. Prosecution code. 2013. Available from: https://www.doj.gov.hk/en/publications/pdf/pdcode1314e.pdf. Accessed 23 Jan 2023.
3. R v Rose [2017] EWCA Crim 1168.
4. Quick O. Prosecuting ‘gross’ medical negligence: manslaughter, discretion, and the Crown Prosecution
Service. J Law Soc 2006;33:421-50. Crossref
5. UK Department of Health and Social Care. Gross
negligence manslaughter in healthcare. 2018. Available
from: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/williams-review-into-gross-negligence-manslaughter-in-healthcare. Accessed 20 Jan 2023.
6. General Medical Council. Independent review of gross negligence manslaughter and culpable homicide. 2019.
Available from: https://www.gmc-uk.org/-/media/documents/independent-review-of-gross-negligence-manslaughter-and-culpable-homicide---final-report_pd-78716610.pdf. Accessed 20 Jan 2023.