The GMC’s pursuit of a pediatric trainee, Dr Hadiza Bawa-Garba, claiming she had fallen short of its standards, came to an end when it lost its battle at the High Court yesterday. The facts behind Jack Adcock’s death are complex and were catalogued in the judgment.
On behalf of the profession, my sincere sympathies go to Jack’s family. I accept that no amount of apologies from anyone in the NHS can relieve their suffering at the loss of their son.
In this protracted case, which has been going on since 18th February 2011, there are no winners. A family has lost a loving child and a registrar previously with an unblemished record has been branded a criminal and has now only been restored to the medical register.
The GMC proceedings were at odds with natural justice.So incensed by the GMC’s attitude and treatment of a trainee were individual doctors, including Dr Jonathan Cusack and Dr Jenny Vaughn, as well as organisations such as the Doctors' Association UK, the BMA, the British Association of Physicians of Indian Origin and the British International Doctors Association, that they united to fight this injustice – assisted by medical media, in particular Pulse and the BMJ. Indeed this may not have been possible without a huge crowdfunding initiative and the generosity of NHS doctors, which raised over £325,000.
A thorough and radical root and branch reform of the GMC is required
The judgment proves beyond doubt that the GMC is out of touch with the challenges of working on the frontline and worse still, its actions are viewed as diluting patient safety – one of the principal reasons for its existence. The GMC’s actions were purely punitive against a trainee doctor who trusted the investigation process. The regulator has been found wanting. The GMC’s own tribunal found Bawa-Garba to be at fault, and recommended a 12-month suspended sentence, but did not suggest terminating her license to practice as a doctor. However, in an unprecedented move, the GMC took her to the High Court where it was ruled this January that the appropriate sentence was erasure from the medical register, rather than suspension.
Pursuing Dr Bawa-Garba’s erasure through the courts was a foolish error of judgement on the part of the GMC head, Mr Charlie Massey. Mr Massey has not apologised, and on several past occasions implied that he would take similar action again in such a scenario.
The GMC has shown it cannot be trusted to take a neutral and non-punitive approach when the fault lies in system failures. Much has happened that needs changing – how NHS doctors work, how we are regulated and how we raise concerns. The Bawa-Garba scenario could happen again and again, unless we have legally mandated safe staffing and proper resourcing and funding in the NHS.
Meanwhile the very existence of the GMC to keep patients safe, maintain the confidence in the profession and set standards to deliver safe service have repeatedly been found wanting.
I recall that since early 2000, the profession, including the BMA, has often expressed lack of confidence in the GMC. A thorough and radical root and branch reform of the GMC is required.
Dame Clare Marx has been named as the new chair of the GMC, a welcome appointment in that she is the first woman in history to hold the position. But can she assure the profession of her independence and fairness, in view of her earlier appointment as chair of the GMC-commissioned independent review of gross negligence manslaughter and culpable homicide in medicine? The influence of some within the GMC is having a long standing and damaging effect on the reputation of a regulator, which should be leading the medical profession by example.
Trust between the GMC and the profession has completely broken down, and not for the first time the public will have no faith in the judgement that the regulator passes on either errant or safe doctors who happen to be subject to its investigations.
Where previously doctors at the sharp end of its stick have made news headlines, the GMC itself has now become the news of the decade. This verdict is a timely warning for the Government too, that action is urgently needed to properly resource the NHS and address the systemic pressures and constraints that doctors are working under and which compromise the delivery of high-quality, safe patient care.
This time, it’s not Hadiza Bawa-Garba but the GMC that is in the dock.
Dr Kailash Chand is a retired GP in Tameside
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