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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Arora v General Medical Council [2008] EWHC 1596 (Admin) (22 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1596.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1596 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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DR OM PRAKASH ARORA | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL | Respondent |
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Ms Catherine Callaghan (instructed by GMC Legal, London Nw1 3JN) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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"It has come to the attention of the Eastern Birmingham Primary Care Trust that you have been working as a General Medical Practitioner with Dr Sen-Gupta, 999 Warwick Road, Acocks Green, Birmingham."
I interpose to say that the appellant accepts that he did indeed work as a locum, doing 22 sessions.
"No medical practitioner shall perform medical services unless he is included in the medical Performers List for a Primary Care Trust in England. The General Medical Council has established a List of Registered Medical Practitioners from the 1 April 2006 and, had your name been on a Performers List in any PCT in England, your name would have been included in the Register.
I understand that you have advised Mrs Y Hull, Birmingham Primary Care Shared Services Agency, that you are on the Wandsworth PCT Performers List but they are unable to confirm this and you need to provide me with written evidence of registration on the Wandsworth list and the GMC Register.
I would reiterate that you must not perform medical services until you are included on the Register. If you are on a Performers List for any PCT, please advise me immediately in order that we can confirm the position.
I would confirm that the General Medical Council has been informed of the PCT's concern. The PCT will be undertaking further investigations into this matter."
"I wish to bring it to your kind notice that I am working as regular (full time) GP Medical Officer with Wandsworth P.C.T. My employment started on 15-09-2003 with regular ten sessions per week."
"The original employment contract [is] enclosed here for yourself to view and certify to confirm.
Actual performance list started as per GMC ruling on 01-04-06. But before this period performance list was not strictly in force although many GPs were in regular employment with respected P.C.Ts.
Following a recent decision by GMC Wandsworth P.C.T. is going to move my job to different G.P. surgery but still with in PCT jurisdiction."
I interpose to say that that is a reference to the result of the hearing of the Fitness to Practise Panel in March 2006, which imposed certain conditions on the appellant which he needed to move away from his existing job to be able to meet.
"I therefore present my evidence (indirect) to state that I am on Wandsworth P.C.T. performance list."
"We have now received confirmation from Wandsworth PCT that you have never been on the Performers List of Wandsworth PCT. We have been informed that you submitted incomplete documentation to the PCT. I would again reiterate that you must not perform any further medical services in England until you are properly registered with the General Medical Council and have written confirmation that you are on a PCT Performers List. Clearly your future work in general practice will depend on the outcome of the GMC's Fitness to Practise Panel and the appeal process.
This matter was discussed at the meeting of the PCT's Assessment Group on 19 April 2006. In view of the seriousness of the fact that you have been working as a GP whilst not on a PCT Performers List, including the Acocks Green Medical Centre, would you please submit: ..."
Then various further confirmations were required.
The statutory provisions
"A person's fitness to practise shall be regarded as 'impaired' for the purposes of this Act by reason only of —
(a) misconduct;
(b) deficient professional performance; ..."
There then follow three other categories which are not presently relevant.
The decision of the Fitness to Practise Panel
The court's approach on an appeal
The appellant's case
(1) a doctor who was entitled to be on a list had made a proper application to join it;
(2) the doctor had been asked for further information and documents, and had apparently supplied further information or documents;
(3) there was no communication to him suggesting a problem or delay with his application; and
(4) and crucially in her submission, he was or should have been, as she puts it, high on the PCT's radar, as he was in its direct employ at the time.
"... the actions found proved ... were misleading and you intended them to mislead. These actions satisfy the test of dishonesty stated in Ghosh [a well-known criminal authority], and therefore, the Panel has found that these actions were dishonest and likely to bring the profession into disrepute."
"Examples of dishonesty in professional practice could include defrauding an employer, improperly amending patient records or submitting or providing false references, inaccurate or misleading information on a CV and failing to take reasonable steps to ensure that statements made in formal documents are accurate."
"You must be honest and trustworthy when writing reports, completing or signing forms, or providing evidence in litigation or other formal inquiries. This means that you must take reasonable steps to verify any statement before you sign a document. You must not write or sign documents which are false or misleading because they omit relevant information."
"The Panel heard, during your oral evidence that you believed you were on the Performers List when in fact you were not. There was no evidence that you made any attempt to check that you were on this list. The purpose of the Performers List and the GP Register is to give confidence to the Health Authorities, PCT's and the public. It is important that these lists are accurate and up-to-date."
"25. In other words, it is clear from the FTP Panel's decision that it reached a finding of dishonesty on the basis of Dr Arora's failure to take any steps to ensure the accuracy of the statement in his letter concerning his inclusion on the Wandsworth PCT list."
"'Deficient professional performance' within the meaning of [section] 35C(2)(b) [of the Medical Act 1983] is conceptually separate both from negligence and from misconduct. It connotes a standard of professional performance which is unacceptably low and which (save in exceptional circumstances) has been demonstrated by reference to a fair sample of the doctor's work."
"In considering your performance, the Panel concluded that the assessment carried out in your own practice, using your own equipment, represented a fair sample of your work and demonstrated that your performance had been woefully deficient. You were uncomfortable with some of the equipment. You could not answer adequately the clinical questions posed by Dr Patel thus failing to demonstrate essential knowledge required by a Medical Practitioner providing ophthalmic services."
Sanction