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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Igwilo v the General Medical Council. [2017] EWHC 419 (Admin) (26 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/419.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 419 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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OKWUOLISA DUKE IGWILO | Appellant | |
v | ||
THE GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL. | Respondent |
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Trading as DTI
8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr I Hare (instructed by GMC Legal) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT S: (APPROVED)
Crown Copyright ©
[...]
"3. Dr Igwilo qualified as a doctor at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital in 1997, and registered with the GMC in 2002. He obtained his membership of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2006, as well as an MSc. At the time at which the incidents of misconduct occurred, he was employed as a locum consultant psychiatrist in the private sector. He was also undertaking a placement at Broadmoor to gain further expertise in forensic psychiatry.
4. Dr Igwilo applied to the GMC for a Certificate of Eligibility for Specialist Registration (CESR) for entry in the Specialist Register of Forensic Psychiatrists, which would qualify him for appointment as a consultant. In support of the application, he was required to submit a portfolio of work demonstrating that he had the requisite knowledge, skill and experience. The evidence has to be validated.
5. Dr Igwilo's first application in July 2010 was unsuccessful. He was sent a detailed decision on 1 April 2011 which made seven recommendations. Dr Igwilo exercised his right to apply for a review of the GMC's decision on 29 June 2011, but this was also unsuccessful. The decision letter of 1 November 2011 made four recommendations.
6. Dr Igwilo re-applied on 15 November 2012, submitting inter alia further evidence to address the recommendations in the letter of 1 November 2012. The GMC noticed that one of the reports which was signed by him had also been submitted by another applicant as his own. In the course of the investigation, Dr Igwilo misled the GMC about the provenance of the report. He also claimed that all the other reports he had submitted were his own work. On 29 January 2013, he withdrew his application by email."
"27.The Panel was entitled, if it thought it appropriate to do so, to place weight on Dr Igwilo's mitigation, and to accept his evidence, supported by character references, that this was an isolated period of dishonesty which occurred at a particularly stressful time for him, and that he had since undergone an extensive period of reflection and remediation, which meant that there was no risk of repetition.
28. However, I consider that the Panel was unduly lenient in concluding that Dr Igwilo's fitness to practise was not currently impaired, given the very serious and sustained deception of the regulator which he embarked upon, purely to advance his career. He falsified a large number of documents: 24 documents described as reports in respect of different patients, 5 documents described as reports for Courts or Tribunals in respect of different patients, 7 sets of documents described as section 48 paperwork for different patients, 1 set of documents described as section 37 paperwork, 4 referral letters, 2 letters to patients' general medical practitioners and correspondence confirming appointments and placements and other correspondence. The scale of the falsification indicated it was an elaborate deception which must have taken some considerable time to plan and implement. His dishonesty affected his professional colleagues, as he represented their work as his own, or claimed that they had approved of his work when they had not done so.
29. The Panel was overly generous in accepting his submission that when his deception came to light he admitted his guilt and apologised immediately. Before his deception came to light as a result of independent investigation by the GMC, he maintained the falsehood. From the evidence, it appears that he only admitted his guilt and apologised once he realised that he was going to be exposed. He did not confess to the falsifications of the other documents until later, once the disciplinary proceedings were brought against him.
30. Dishonesty constitutes a breach of a fundamental tenet of the profession of medicine: honesty, openness and integrity are listed amongst the fundamental duties of doctors in 'Good Medical Practice' and being honest and trustworthy and acting with integrity are described by 'Good Medical Practice' as being at the heart of medical professionalism. Plainly cases of dishonesty vary in severity; in my view, this case was at the more serious end of the scale.
31. The purpose of the Specialist Medical Lists and the GMC's regulation of them is to protect the public interest, including the safety of patients, and in the case of forensic psychiatrists, to maintain the standards of expert evidence submitted in court cases. Dr Igwilo's applications had not met the required standard for the Specialist Register of Forensic Psychiatrists on two previous occasions. He responded to the guidance given by the GMC as to how he might improve his prospects of success by using deception and deceit to try to obtain inclusion in the list when he was unable to do so by legitimate means. Such conduct jeopardised the integrity of the Specialist Medical List system, and the GMC's ability to regulate it. In my judgment, the Panel did not sufficiently recognise the seriousness of these factors, and indeed, made no mention of them.
32. I consider that the Panel made an error of judgment in concluding that the need to maintain public confidence in the profession and the regulator, and to declare and uphold proper standards of conduct and behaviour, was met by the fact that Dr Igwilo had been subject to fitness to practise proceedings and that he had shown insight and remorse. I do not consider that a Panel, properly directed, could reasonably reach such a decision on the facts of this case."
"When you made your application for voluntarily erasure in February 2016, you did not make clear that you were subject to the [PSA] proceedings, which had been issued on 23 October 2015, or that they had been listed in November 2015 for hearing before the High Court in March 2016.
This was not information of which the Assistant Registrar, who considered your application was, or could otherwise have been aware [...] Accordingly, the decision of the Assistant Registrar to grant your application for voluntarily erasure was made on the basis of a fundamental misunderstanding as to the then current status of your fitness to practise proceedings [...] We will accordingly take immediate steps to restore your name to the Medical Register. We will then refer your case back to the MPTS for them to list a hearing before a freshly constituted Medical Practitioners Tribunal, in accordance with the Order of Lang J dated 15 March 2016."
"Application for an adjournment.
7. You, on behalf of Dr Igwilo, have applied for the tribunal to adjourn this hearing under rule 29(2) of the General Medical Council's (Fitness to Practise) Rules 2004. That rule provides that:
'Where a hearing of which notice has been served on the practitioner in accordance with these Rules has commenced, the [...] considering the matter may, at any stage in their proceedings, whether of their own motion or upon the application of a party to the proceedings, adjourn the hearing until such time and date as they think fit.'
8. In considering your application, the tribunal has considered all of the evidence placed before it at this stage of the proceedings, namely the judgment of Lang J in The PSA v [1] GMC and [2] Okwuolisa Duke Igwilo [2016] EWHC 524 (Admin) - and a chronology of events. The tribunal also took account of the submissions made by you and those made by Mr Jackson QC on behalf of the GMC.
9. You submitted that the tribunal should adjourn the hearing as legal challenges are being pursued both in relation to Lang J's determination to remit Dr Igwilo 's case back to this tribunal, and to the GMC's action of the re-registering the doctor on 28 April 2016. You further submitted that there are therefore "pending appeals", which if successful would mean the tribunal, would have no jurisdiction to consider a sanction.
10. Mr Jackson opposed your application. He submitted that that the decisions being challenged were not pending appeals but pending applications for leave to appeal. He submitted that there can be no presumption that leave to appeal would be granted. He highlighted that there has been no indication as to when Dr Igwilo will get a decision on those applications. He emphasised that the case is now a year old and is the subject of Lang J's judgment. He submitted that it would not be in the public interest to adjourn the hearing.
11. Whilst the tribunal has noted the submissions made it has exercised its own judgment when determining whether or not to adjourn the hearing.
12. Throughout its deliberations, the tribunal was mindful of the overarching objective set out in the Medical Act 1983 (as amended). That overarching objective is the protection of the public and involves the pursuit of the following:
A. To protect, promote and maintain the health, safety and wellbeing of the public.
B. To maintain public confidence in the profession.
C. To promote and maintain proper professional standards in conduct for members of that profession.
13. In reaching its decision, the tribunal bore in mind the need to be fair to both parties - the doctor and the GMC as the regulator. The tribunal balanced Dr Igwilo's interests with the public interest, which includes an expectation of cases which come before a tribunal will be heard expeditiously and without undue delay.
[...]
15. The tribunal considered the background summarised above. It has had regard to the fact that the original hearing took place in September 2015, with the appeal judgment being given in March 2016. There is no evidence to show that if the tribunal were to grant an adjournment the situation before a future tribunal would be any different.
It has noted that there is no known timeframe in relation to how long the application Dr Igwilo has made for permission to appeal will take to be considered. It has borne in mind that if the challenges the doctor seeks to make are successful then any decision this tribunal makes in relation to sanction will fall away. The tribunal does not consider that proceeding with the case would result in unfairness to either party.
Dr Igwilo would not be significantly disadvantaged if this tribunal were to proceed as he is able to present his case on the issue of sanction. Having considered all the circumstances, the tribunal determined that it is in the public interest that this tribunal should proceed expeditiously."
"29. In reaching its decision on sanction, the tribunal balanced the mitigating factors with the aggravated factors in Dr Igwilo's case.
30. The tribunal considered the following to be mitigating factors in Dr Igwilo's case:
• Dr Igwilo has made a number of admissions in relation to the facts of his case and conceded that his fitness to practise was impaired at the time of the events;
• Dr Igwilo was of previous good character.
• Dr Igwilo has not repeated his misconduct;
• Dr Igwilo has made reflections on his misconduct and his efforts to remediate it, in so far as it is remediable;
• Dr Igwilo has made expressions of remorse and regret and has demonstrated an insight, albeit limited, and.
• Dr Igwilo has submitted evidence that he was suffering from 'stress and burn out'.
31. The tribunal considered the following to be aggravating factors in Dr Igwilo's case:
• Dr Igwilo's dishonest actions were a significant departure from the principles set out in good medical practice;
• Dr Igwilo's dishonesty was of a large scale and involved elaborate planning;
• Dr Igwilo's dishonesty was deliberate, significant and sustained over a significant period of time required to compile the documentation;
• Dr Igwilo's dishonesty affected his professional colleagues;
• Dr Igwilo's dishonest actions were for personal gain;
• Dr Igwilo failed to be open and honest with the GMC, despite being challenged by them; and
• Dr Igwilo's misconduct had the potential to cause harm to patients, in that, had his dishonesty not been recognised it could have resulted in his being grant at Certificate of Eligibility for Specialist Registration, which could have enabled him to obtain a substantive consultant position which he was not qualified or entitled to undertake.
32. Dr Igwilo dishonest actions have seriously undermined the GMC's primary responsibility to protect patients and maintain public confidence in the profession and to declare and uphold proper standards of conduct and behaviour.
33. The tribunal was of the view that the dishonest behaviour which was resulted in Dr Igwilo's misconduct and impaired fitness to practise was so serious as to be fundamentally incompatible with continued registration and that a period of suspension would not adequately reflect the seriousness of the tribunal's findings."
"82. Erasure may well be appropriate when the behaviour involves any of the following factors (this list is not exhaustive):
a. Particularly serious departure from the principles set out in Good Medical Practice i.e behaviour fundamentally incompatible with being a good doctor.
b. A reckless disregard for the principles set out in Good Medical Practice and/or patient safety.
[...]
d. Abuse of position/trust (see Good Medical Practice paragraph 65 'you must make sure that your conduct at all times justifies your patients' trust in you and the public's trust in the profession'.
[...]
h. Dishonesty, especially where persistent and/or covered up [...]
i. Putting an interest before those of patients (see Good Medical Practice - 'Make the care of your patient your first concern'.
[...]
j. Persistent lack of insight and seriousness of actions or consequences."
"19. [...] As it seems to me the fact that a principal purpose of the Panel's jurisdiction in relation to sanctions is the preservation and maintenance of public confidence in the profession rather than the administration of retributive justice, particular force is given to the need to accord special respect to the judgment of the professional decision-making body in the shape of the Panel.
[...]
20. [...] the High Court will correct material errors of fact and of course of law and it will exercise a judgment, though distinctly and firmly a secondary judgment, as to the application of the principles to the facts of the case."
Conclusions