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[2011] NSWCA 219
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Tung v Health Care Complaints Commission & Anor [2011] NSWCA 219 (29 July 2011)
Last Updated: 2 August 2011
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Case Title:
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Tung v Health Care Complaints Commission &
Anor
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Before:
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Giles JA at [1], Campbell JA at [71], Tobias AJA
at [72]
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Decision:
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(1) Appeal against the Tribunal's finding as to
impairment dismissed. (2) Appeal against the orders made by the Tribunal
allowed. (3) Set aside the orders made by the Tribunal on 11 March 2010.
(4) Remit the matter to the Tribunal for reconsideration of the order(s) (if
any) to be made consequent on its findings. (5) First respondent to pay the
appellant's costs of the appeal. [Note: The Uniform Civil Procedure Rules
2005 provide (Rule 36.11) that unless the Court otherwise orders, a judgment or
order is taken to be entered when it is recorded in the Court's computerised
court record system. Setting aside and variation of judgments or orders is dealt
with by Rules 36.15, 36.16, 36.17 and 36.18. Parties should in particular note
the time limit of fourteen days in Rule 36.16.]
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Catchwords:
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MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS -Complaints of
unsatisfactory conduct and impairment - complaints found proved by Medical
Tribunal - deregistration
of practitioner ordered - whether denial of procedural
fairness in Tribunal not making known its observations of practitioner in
relation to impairment - observations of practitioner as witness - confirmatory
of matters on which expert witness had diagnosed
psychiatric condition - not
necessary that Tribunal specifically draw them to practitioner's attention -
whether Tribunal failed
to engage with medical reports on which practitioner
relied - no failure - if any error, was not error in point of law - whether
open
to make deregistration order - Tribunal failed to address whether impairment
such that practitioner not competent to practice
medicine - impairment likely to
impact on practice of medicine "sooner or later" - finding of present
incompetence to practice medicine
not open - deregistration order could not be
made - matter remitted to Tribunal for reconsideration of orders.
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Texts Cited:
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Parties:
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Dr Margaret Tung - Appellant Karen Mobbs, Health
Care Complaints Commission - First Respondent Medical Tribunal of New South
Wales - Second Respondent
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Representation
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M Hall - Appellant G Furness SC & R Graycar
- First Respondent Submitting appearance - Second Respondent
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- Solicitors:
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Truman Hoyle - Appellant Health Care Complaints
Commission - Respondent
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File number(s):
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Decision Under Appeal
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- Court / Tribunal:
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Ainslie-Wallace DCJ, Dr J Hely, Dr P Anderson
and Dr C Berglund PhD
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- Date of Decision:
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- Citation:
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- Court File Number(s)
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Publication Restriction:
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Judgment
- GILES
JA: The appellant was conditionally registered as a medical practitioner in
January 2002, and gained full registration in January
2003. On 11 March 2010 the
Medical Tribunal ("the Tribunal") ordered, on appeal from an order by the
Chairperson, that her name be
removed from the Register of Medical
Practitioners.
- This
is an appeal against the decision of the Tribunal and its exercise of the power
to deregister the appellant, brought pursuant
to s 90 of the Medical Practice
Act 1992 ("the Act"). The Act was repealed with effect from 30 June 2010 by
the Health Practitioner Regulation Amendment Act 2010, following adoption
of the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (NSW). It was common
ground that the Act continued to apply for the purposes of the appeal.
- An
appeal against a decision of the Tribunal is "with respect to a point of law" (s
90(1)(a)), but an appeal against the Tribunal's
exercise of its disciplinary
powers is not confined to error with respect to a point of law although it
requires error: see Bannister v Walton (1993) 30 NSWLR 699; Prakash v
Health Care Complaints Commission [2006] NSWCA 153; Health Care
Complaints Commission v Karalasingham [2007] NSWCA 267; Lindsay v Health
Care Complaints Commission [2010] NSWCA 194.
- For
the reasons which follow -
(a) no error in point of law has been shown in the Tribunal's
decision that the complaints made about the appellant were proved; but
(b) on the findings it made, it was not open to the Tribunal to order that
the appellant be deregistered.
- The
orders made by the Tribunal should be set aside, and the matter should be
remitted to the Tribunal for reconsideration of what
order(s), if any, should be
made with respect to the appellant.
Procedural background
- On
1 August 2007 the first respondent referred two complaints about the appellant
to a Professional Standards Committee ("the Committee")
of the New South Wales
Medical Board ("the Board") (Act, s 5(1)(a)).
- The
complaints were -
" COMPLAINT ONE
Has been guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct within the meaning of
section 36(1)(b) of the Act in that she contravened a
provision of the Act.
Particulars
The Medical Board issued a notice to the practitioner under cover of a letter
dated 22 September 2006 mailed to the practitioner requesting
that the
practitioner provide certain information concerning the practitioner under
section 127C of the Act.
1. The practitioner failed, without reasonable excuse, to comply with the
request by the Medical Board pursuant to section 127C of
the Act to provide the
information set out in the notice without a reasonable period specified in the
notice.
COMPLAINT TWO
Suffers from an impairment
Particulars
The Practitioner suffers from a mental impairment, disability, condition or
disorder namely Paranoid Personality Disorder which detrimentally
affects or is
likely to detrimentally affect the practitioner's mental capacity to practise
medicine."
- In
April-May 2008 the Committee conducted an inquiry into the complaints. The
appellant was not represented at the inquiry and conducted
her case on her own
behalf.
- In
reasons published on 10 November 2008, the Committee found that each of the
complaints was proved. It found as to complaint one
that the appellant "is
guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct in respect of Section 36(1)(b) of
the Act", that being a provision
whereby contravention of a provision of the Act
constitutes unsatisfactory professional conduct. It found as to complaint two
that
the appellant "suffers from an impairment pursuant to Section 39 of the Act
which detrimentally affects her physical and mental capacity
to practice
medicine".
- The
Committee made no order in relation to complaint one. In relation to complaint
two, it "recommend[ed] deregistration on the grounds
of lack of physical or
mental capacity to practice medicine" (s 63(1)) and referred the matter with its
recommendation to the Chairperson
of the Tribunal (s 63(2)).
- On
4 February 2009 the Chairperson ordered that the appellant's name be removed
from the Register of Medical Practitioners from that
date (s 63(3)).
- By
a notice of appeal dated 6 March 2009 the appellant appealed to the Tribunal,
pursuant to s 87(1) of the Act, against the Committee's
findings and
recommendation and the Chairperson's deregistration order. The grounds of appeal
were -
"1. The findings were unwarranted, against the evidence and the
weight of the evidence and failed to take into account relevant considerations
and evidence.
2. The appellant was denied procedural fairness and was not given adequate
opportunity to respond by way of evidence or submissions
to the possibility that
she faced deregistration nor to appeal against the findings or the
recommendation of the Professional Standards
Committee prior to the order of
deregistration made by the Chairperson.
3. The findings were wrong."
- By
s 87(4) of the Act the appeal was "to be dealt with by way of rehearing and
fresh evidence, or evidence in addition to or in substitution
for the evidence
received at the inquiry, may be given". The Tribunal could dismiss the appeal,
or make any finding or exercise any
power or combination of powers that the
Tribunal could have made or exercised if the complaints had been originally
referred to the
Tribunal (s 87(5)). The appeal "does not affect any finding or
exercise of any power with respect to which it has been made until
the Tribunal
makes an order on the appeal" (s 87(6)).
- The
Tribunal, constituted by Ainslie-Wallace DCJ, Drs Joanna Hely and Peter Anderson
and Dr Catherine Berglund PhD, heard the appeal
over the period 1-4 March 2010.
The appellant was again unrepresented and conducted her own case. The appeal was
in substance a complete
rehearing. The reasons of the Committee were before the
Tribunal, but it received medical reports and other documents additional
to
those which had been before the Committee, and oral evidence as to failure to
provide information and as to impairment was given.
The appellant gave evidence
in chief and was cross-examined.
- In
reasons published on 11 March 2010 the Tribunal found as to complaint one that
the appellant "is guilty of unsatisfactory conduct",
and as to complaint two
that the appellant "suffers from a Paranoid Personality Disorder and ... that it
is of a nature that it will
affect her capacity to practice medicine and is thus
impaired". It ordered that the appeal be dismissed and the appellant's name
be
removed from the Register of Medical Practitioners.
- The
appellant commenced her appeal to the Supreme Court on 8 April 2010. By force of
s 48(1)(vii) of the Supreme Court Act 1970, it was assigned to the Court
of Appeal. The Tribunal was named as second respondent: it was an unnecessary
party, but in any event
it filed a submitting appearance save as to costs. The
first respondent was the effective opponent.
The grounds of appeal
- The
grounds of appeal maintained in this Court were -
"2. The Tribunal lacked power to order deregistration, or ought not
to have ordered deregistration, where there was no complaint before
it that the
Appellant was not competent to practice medicine, but only that the Appellant
suffered from an impairment.
3. The Appellant was not afforded procedural fairness, in that the Appellant
was not warned that the Tribunal intended to take its
observations of her
demeanour into account in determining whether she suffered from an impairment,
and did not afford her an opportunity
to deal with such observations.
4. The Tribunal failed to provide reasons for its conclusions that because
the Appellant suffered from an impairment, namely Paranoid
Personality Disorder,
she therefore was not competent to practice medicine and/or should be
deregistered.
5. The Tribunal failed to consider whether any remedy other than
deregistration was appropriate in response to its finding of an impairment,
or
alternatively did not give adequate reasons for its rejection of such
alternatives.
6. The finding of the Tribunal that the Appellant suffered from an impairment
was not one which was open to a reasonable tribunal
proceeding according to
law."
- Grounds
3 and 6 were concerned with the Tribunal's findings as to the complaint of
impairment. Grounds 2, 4 and 5 were concerned with
the Tribunal's exercise of
its powers by making a deregistration order. There was no challenge to the
finding of unsatisfactory professional
conduct, but it was common ground that it
could not support the deregistration order made by the Chairperson or by the
Tribunal.
Competence and impairment
- Amongst
the complaints which could be made about a registered medical practitioner in s
39 of the Act were -
"(c) Lack of competence
A complaint that the practitioner is not competent to practise medicine (that
is, the person does not have sufficient physical capacity,
mental capacity or
skill to practise medicine or does not have sufficient communication skills for
the practice of medicine, including
an adequate command of the English
language)."
"(d) Impairment
A complaint that the practitioner suffers from an impairment."
- The
definitions in cll 2 and 3 of the Dictionary in the Act provided -
"2 Competence to practise medicine
A person is competent to practise medicine only if the person:
(a) has sufficient physical capacity, mental capacity and skill to practise
medicine, and
(b) has sufficient communication skills for the practice of medicine,
including an adequate command of the English language."
"3 Impairment
A person is considered to suffer from an impairment if the person suffers
from any physical or mental impairment, disability, condition
or disorder which
detrimentally affects or is likely to detrimentally affect the person's physical
or mental capacity to practise
medicine. Habitual drunkenness or addiction to a
deleterious drug is considered to be a physical or mental disorder."
- A
finding that any complaint against a practitioner had been proved could enliven
one of the disciplinary powers in s 61 of the Act.
The powers in s 61 did not
include deregistration. Deregistration could be recommended by a Committee "if
the Committee is satisfied
(when it finds on a complaint about the person) that
the person does not have sufficient physical and mental capacity to practice
medicine" (s 63(1)). Such a finding would reflect the definition of competence
to practice medicine. There could then be an order
by the Chairperson as
occurred in this case, from which there could be an appeal to the Tribunal.
- Section
64(1) provided -
"(1) The Tribunal may by order suspend a person from practising
medicine for a specified period or direct that a person be deregistered
if the
Tribunal is satisfied (when it finds on a complaint about the person):
(a) that the person is not competent to practise medicine, or
(b) that the person is guilty of professional misconduct, or
(c) that the person has been convicted of or made the subject of a criminal
finding for an offence, either in or outside New South
Wales, and the
circumstances of the offence render the person unfit in the public interest to
practise medicine, or
(d) that the person is not of good character."
- A
finding that a complaint of impairment had been proved could enliven referral to
an Impaired Registrants Panel and eventually action
of various kinds under Pt 5
of the Act. It could not of itself bring about a deregistration order pursuant
to s 64(1). It could nonetheless
bear upon competence to practice medicine: see
Lindsay v Health Care Complaints Commission [2010] NSWCA 194 at [168] per
Sackville AJA, with whom Giles and Young JJA relevantly agreed -
"A person is 'competent to practise medicine' only if he or she
has, relevantly, sufficient mental capacity to practise medicine and
has
sufficient communication skills to do so (cl 2). There is clearly a close
relationship between a finding of impairment, based
on the existence of a
disorder which is likely to detrimentally affect a practitioner's mental
capacity to practise medicine, and
a finding of lack of competence to practise
medicine based on a want of sufficient mental capacity to practise medicine.
Accordingly,
a finding of impairment of that sort may very well lead to a
finding that the medical practitioner is not competent to practise medicine
within the meaning of s 64(1)(a) of the Act."
The Tribunal's reasons
- The
Tribunal relevantly had before it reports of Dr Murray Wright, consultant
psychiatrist, dated 29 January 2002, 29 June 2005, 15
November 2005, 3 April
2008 and 29 April 2008, tendered by the first respondent; and reports of Dr A R
M Freeman and Dr Klaus Bergmann,
consultant psychiatrists; Dr Samuel Lai and Dr
Luk Siu Luen, psychiatrists; Professor Peter Lee, consultant psychologist;
Professor
Felice Mak, psychiatrist; and Dr Jonathan Phillips, consultant
psychiatrist; dated in various dates in 2007 and 2009, tendered by
the
appellant. Dr Wright gave oral evidence and was cross-examined.
- Following
concerns about the appellant's mental health notified to the Board, she was
required to attend Dr Wright for assessment.
In the 29 January 2002 report Dr
Wright said that the appellant's presentation was suggestive of some form of
psychiatric disturbance,
either paranoid personality disorder or some form of
paranoid or delusional disorder sufficient to warrant her inclusion in an
Impaired
Registrants Programme. He expressed concern that the stress of working
as an intern or resident may cause her condition to deteriorate.
- An
Impaired Registrants Panel was convened, but it was not satisfied that the
appellant was impaired in a way that would impact on
her capacity to practise
medicine.
- Further
concerns about the appellant's mental health, reported during the appellant's
advanced general practitioner training with
the Sydney Institute of General
Practice and Training Ltd ("SIGPET"), were notified to the Board. She was
required again to attend
on Dr Wright. In the 29 June 2005 report Dr Wright
expressed the opinion that the concerns suggested a pattern of behaviour in
which
the appellant had difficulty in negotiating relatively straight forward
inter-personal conflict, and that the appellant was likely
to be suffering from
a paranoid personality disorder that appeared to create difficulties for her
when under stress. He said that
while there was no evidence that this had
impacted on the appellant's clinical work, he anticipated that it could create
problems
in the long term given that situations of conflict are likely to arise
with patients.
- The
appellant's participation in the general practice training programme was
terminated for non-compliance, unprofessional conduct
and inappropriate
behaviour. The Board referred the appellant to a reconvened Impaired Registrants
Panel, but it could not be convened
because the appellant had left Australia and
e-mail correspondence was unable to find a mutually convenient date.
- The
Board then asked Dr Wright to review his opinion in the light of documents
obtained from SIGPET, resulting in his report of 15
November 2005. As summarised
by the Tribunal -
"20 ... In this report Dr Wright said that the SIGPET documents
provide:
'... detailed and consistent support for the assertion that (the appellant)
experiences very significant difficulty in negotiating
straightforward problems
and interpersonal conflict. The communication is at times circumstantial, there
is a failure to resolve
important issues and there appears to be an undercurrent
of mistrust in many of (the appellant's) communications. .... There are
issues
raised in addition which refer to (the appellant's) reliability, at times
inappropriate interactions with practice staff
and a lack of discretion. '
21 While noting that there was no evidence of impaired clinical performance,
Dr Wright said that he remained concerned that given
the range, depth and
persistence of the appellants difficulties, sooner or later they will impact
adversely on (the appellant's)
clinical skills.
22 He concluded:
'There is no clear evidence of psychotic symptoms but there is an abundance
of evidence suggestive of a Paranoid Personality Disorder.
'
23 Dr Wright said that the documents confirmed that the appellant had little
insight into the nature and extent of her difficulties.
Although he was not
optimistic about the benefit that any psychiatric treatment may offer her,
believed that she should
be encouraged to seek it."
- The
Tribunal referred to the appellant's objection to many of the SIGPET documents
on the basis that, although purporting to have
been written by her, they had not
been written by her. The Tribunal did not accept the appellant in this respect,
and found that
the appellant wrote the disputed documents and "was not being
candid in her evidence" (at [32]).
- The
Tribunal said of Dr Wright's reports dated 3 and 29 April 2008 -
" 34 On 3rd April 2008, Dr Wright made a further report. Although
an appointment was made for him to see the appellant, she was unable
to attend
and Dr Wright prepared a report based on documents provided to him by the Board
concerning
its dealings with the appellant.
35 The documents detailed the attempts by the Board to determine where the
appellant was living and working and her availability to
appear at the PSC. Dr
Wright commented that the documents indicated that the appellant had been
evasive and untruthful about where
she was living and working. Her apparent
evasiveness and the fact that it was maintained over a long period of time
was a factor he took into account when considering impairment.
36 Dr Wright confirmed his opinion that the appellant probably suffers from a
Paranoid Personality Disorder. He said that the evidence
of: ' sustained and
repeated untruthfulness coupled with a pattern of mistrust, suspicion,
confusion, hostility and an inability to resolve
conflict ' led him to
believe that the appellant was impaired and the impairment was likely to impact
on her ability to function as a medical
practitioner. He had ' significant
reservations ' that the appellant would engage in treatment.
37 A further interview was scheduled and the appellant was seen by Dr Wright
on 21st April 2008. Dr Wright made a further report based
on this interview
dated 29th April 2008. During the interview, Dr Wright asked the appellant to
confirm where exactly she had been
working and whether she had been living out
of Australia. He said:
'What followed was a fairly circuitous and confusing interaction requiring me
to ask quite bluntly on several occasions whether (the
appellant) was in Sydney
or in Canada during that time. (The appellant) appeared reluctant to answer
definitively where she was during
that period... ."
.
The Tribunal had a similar experience when the appellant was being cross-
examined by counsel for the respondent.
38 Dr Wright concluded:
'There is no direct evidence of impaired patient treatment by (the
appellant). However, it is my opinion that her tendency to perceive
conflict
with little or no evidence, and to deal with conflict in a manner which
escalates the concern and/or perpetuates confusion
and misunderstanding will
occur in a clinical environment at some time and that such behavior would
adversely impact on the clinical
interaction with patients and their relatives
and also impact on treatment outcomes.'
39 Dr Wright said that this interview confirmed his previous diagnosis that
she probably suffers from a Paranoid Personality Disorder
and that if she were
to work in direct patient contact in a clinical environment:
'It would be a matter of time before her paranoid personality disorder led to
an impairment in clinical performance'. "
- The
appellant's failure to provide information was considered by the Tribunal at
this point. The Board had asked the appellant to
indicate where she was
currently working and to confirm that she was not in Australia. In September
2006 it formally asked her for
information pursuant to s 127C of the Act,
supplying a form to be completed. The appellant e-mailed the Board saying that
the information
had been posted to it. It was not received. The Tribunal said
that it "does not accept her [evidence] that she posted the information
to the
Board and finds that she did not respond to the Board's request" (at [46]).
- After
reference to the Committee's inquiry and its findings and recommendation, the
Tribunal turned to the reports tendered by the
appellant.
- The
reports of Drs Freeman and Bergmann had been provided in 2007 at the request of
the General Medical Council of the United Kingdom
("the GMC"), following
communication by the Board with the GMC. The Tribunal recorded that Dr Freeman
had said that he "found no
grounds from my interview with [the appellant] to
make a diagnosis of illness or personality disorder or to consider that she
might
be unfit to practise or that her practice should be restricted", but had
said that a full psychiatric opinion required as much information
as possible
and that had not been available to him. It recorded that Dr Bergmann had said
that he found no evidence of any paranoid
disorder, but had added that in the
absence of any external reports or information he could not exclude the absence
or occurrence
of any paranoid disorder at any other material time and could make
no judgment about the appellant's fitness to practice.
- The
Tribunal considered that these assessments were "of limited value to the
Tribunal in determining the issues before it" (at [58]),
because the information
provided of the circumstances in which the appellant was notified to the Board
in 2001 and 2005 was "circumscribed"
(at [56], [57]; the appellant had refused
permission for the Board to forward its material to the GMC; and the assessments
were each
on the basis of about an hour's interview with the appellant and only
the information provided by the appellant.
- The
appellant consulted Drs Lai and Siu-Luen Luk in Hong Kong in 2009. Dr Lai's
report said that he did not have sufficient information
to establish a diagnosis
of paranoid personality disorder. Dr Siu-Luen Luk reported that he had seen the
appellant, and "from what
she told me ... she appeared to be functioning well"
and she did not need psychiatric treatment. The Tribunal said -
"59. ... These reports are brief, no indication is given about what
history or other material was given to the authors, no note of
the interaction
between the psychiatrist and the appellant and no diagnostic reasoning was
provided. In all of the circumstances,
the Tribunal does not place any weight on
them in determining this matter."
- The
Tribunal said of Dr Lee's report -
"60. Dr Peter Lee, a psychologist, administered some psychometric
testing to the appellant and reported in April 2009. He concluded
that there was
no suggestion of any significant psychopathology and no paranoia. He said that
her profile, as disclosed on testing,
were consistent with a probable defensive,
psychologically unsophisticated and rigid personality structure with
difficulties accepting
problems."
- Professor
Mak had assessed the appellant in March and April 2009. The Tribunal summarised
her findings and opinions, ultimately the
opinion that the appellant did not
then or in the past suffer from a paranoid personality disorder or any other
psychiatric disorder.
It recorded that the first respondent had required
Professor Mak and Dr Lee for cross-examination, but that no arrangements had
been
made for them to come to Australia or for taking their evidence by
telephone link and that neither was made available for cross-examination.
It
found that Professor Mak had not been provided with all preceding medical
reports. It said that it was clear from her report that
the appellant gave her a
selective history, and also -
"66. It is clear that Dr Mak's opinion was heavily influenced by
the tailored and, frankly misleading, history given to her by the
appellant. She
clearly proceeded on the basis that there was but one instance of conflict
involving the appellant and that it was
of limited duration. There is abundant
evidence before the Tribunal of repeated, sustained conflict perpetuated by the
appellant
in the face of attempts by others to negotiate a resolution.
67. In assessing what weight to give Dr Mak's opinion the Tribunal takes into
account that she was given an incomplete history that
was quite misleading and
selective."
- Dr
Phillips had been consulted in May 2009. The Tribunal recorded his opinion
doubting "that there was clinical evidence to prove
the applicant to have
suffered any form of paranoid disorder at that time, or any other form of
recognisable and diagnosable psychiatric
disorder". The Tribunal noted that
"despite repeated requests" the appellant did not make Dr Phillips available for
cross-examination,
and said that the fact that he was not tested about his
conclusions and opinions was a matter to be taken into account in assessing
the
weight to be given to his report. It found that Dr Phillips was not given the
documents produced by SIGPET or by the Board concerning
the appellant's
interactions with those agencies, and that the account given by the appellant to
Dr Phillips of the history leading
to her name being removed from the Register
was incomplete and in a significant number of aspects inaccurate. It further
accepted
the evidence of Dr Wright that diagnosis of personality disorder was
not by objective infallible tests and that Dr Phillips' report
was open to valid
criticism for requiring "proof positive" (at [75]). It accepted that Dr Phillips
had not had the opportunity to
respond to the criticisms of his report, but
considered that the weight of his opinion was lessened.
- The
Tribunal then referred to Dr Wright's oral evidence in which he further
explained the opinions he had expressed in his reports,
including that his
diagnosis had been formed through interviews conducted over time whereby he
could see similar problems occurring
with different individuals in clinical or
statutory situations and with different sorts of problems, so that his
conclusion was built
up over time. It recorded his view that the reports of Drs
Freeman and Bergmann were limited because of the paucity of information
they
had, and similarly that Dr Phillips' report was limited because he did not have
the documents from SIGPET or those reflecting
the appellant's dealings with the
Board. It described Dr Wright's explanation of the benefit he had in seeing the
appellant over
a period of six years, and in different circumstances, whereby he
was able -
" ... to determine that some of the key factors pointing to the
diagnosis are satisfied because there seems to be recurrent problems
occurring
in different situations which demonstrated an habitual way of responding which
was both inflexible and distressing either
to the individual or to the people
around and associated with an impact on her level of functioning". (at [86])
- The
Tribunal said -
"87. The Tribunal accepts Dr Wright's evidence and prefers his
diagnosis to the doctors whose reports were tendered by the appellant.
It is
clear to the Tribunal that the appellant carefully controlled the information
given to the Hong Kong and English psychiatrists
and gave a history that was
incomplete and, in the Tribunal's view, quite misleading. The Tribunal
recognises that Dr Phillips had
more material available to him but from his
report it seems that he was not given the SIGPET or Board documents, both of
which are,
in the Tribunal's view, critical to an understanding of the history
between the appellant and those regulatory bodies. Finally, the
Tribunal prefers
Dr Wright's diagnosis because he has had the advantage of seeing the appellant
over a longer period of time and
has had access to extrinsic documents which
have confirmed the view he formed.
88. The appellant criticised Dr Wright's opinions and argued that he and she
had not formed a good rapport sufficient to allow him
to draw conclusions from
his interviews with her. The Tribunal finds that the appellant wrongly
characterised the relationship with
Dr Wright and misunderstood his role. Dr
Wright was at pains to note that his was not a usual relationship of
psychiatrist and patient
and, as such, did not expect the open flow of
information that one would usually expect in that circumstance. He clearly drew
a distinction
between that relationship and the circumstances in which he
interviewed the appellant and, in the Tribunal's view, clearly took that
into
account and was astute to the implications of that difference in forming his
opinion. The Tribunal rejects the appellant's criticism
and argument that Dr
Wright's opinion should bear less weight because of her asserted lack of
rapport.
89. The Tribunal had the advantage of observing the appellant in the witness
box over the course of the hearing. There was much in
her evidence and the way
in which she gave it that confirmed Dr Wright's impressions formed during his
interviews with her. The Tribunal
found the appellant to be evasive when being
asked straightforward questions about where she lived and where she had worked
from
time to time."
- Under
the heading "Clinical ability", the Tribunal then referred to a number of
assessment reports of the appellant's performance
as a nurse and medical student
and during her advanced general practitioner terms, observing that there "is no
doubt that each speaks
highly of her capacity and ability in a clinical setting"
(at [90]). It said that there was "abundant evidence that the appellant
performed well above average in all her clinical interactions", and accepted
that "from her nursing time through her Advanced General
Practitioner terms, her
clinical competence was never questioned" (at [91]).
- The
Tribunal continued -
"92. That the appellant had not received any complaints about her
clinical care did not cause Dr Wright to reconsider his opinion.
He said that
people with this disorder are able to keep it in check for a large part of the
time but decompensate under stress. His
concern for the appellant was that
sooner or later that type of stress would arise in a medical practice and would
probably impact
on her ability to interact with patients. He took into account
that during her period in clinical practice, there had been complaints
about her
interactions with administrative and reception staff and felt is [sic] was a
small step to include the patients in that
interaction.
93. Dr Wright remained of the opinion that the appellant suffered from a
Paranoid Personality Disorder from which she would still
be suffering at the
time of the hearing even though he had not re-assessed her. Dr Wright said that
the nature of the condition is
that it is enduring."
- After
referring to reports of doctors in whose practices the appellant had been placed
for the advanced general practitioner terms,
and some other matters, the
Tribunal said -
"100. Although there have been no complaints about the appellant's
clinical ability in terms of her medical knowledge, the Tribunal
accepts Dr
Wright's opinion that given the stress attendant on the practice of medicine as
a doctor, it is likely that her psychiatric
state would eventually cause an
impact on her patients. To a degree, the actions of Dr Price in selecting the
patients that he allowed
the appellant to see reflected Dr Wright's view, and
forestalled any negative impact on patients because of it."
- Under
the heading "Discussion", the Tribunal then posed as the issue for its
determination "whether the appellant suffers from a mental
impairment,
disability, condition or disorder, namely Paranoid Personality Disorder which
detrimentally affects or is likely to detrimentally
affect the practitioner's
mental capacity to practise medicine" (at [101]). After reference to proof on
the balance of probabilities
on the " Briginshaw " test, the Tribunal
concluded its reasons -
" Impairment
104 The Tribunal finds to the requisite standard that the appellant suffers
from a Paranoid Personality Disorder and is also satisfied
that it is of a
nature that it will affect her capacity to practise medicine and is thus
impaired.
Failure to provide information pursuant to section 127C of the Act
105 The Tribunal is also satisfied that the appellant did not return the
information sought by the Board in its letter of 22 September
2006 and does not
accept the appellant that she posted it before the due date of 13th September.
106 Having made that finding, the Tribunal is satisfied that the appellant is
guilty of unsatisfactory professional conduct."
- Without
further discussion, the Tribunal then made its orders.
Ground 3
- The
basis of the ground was [89] of the Tribunal's reasons, set out at [41] above.
The appellant submitted that the Tribunal denied
her procedural fairness because
it did not make known to her the observations on which it intended to proceed,
and used the observations
not to assess credit but to supplement or in
substitution for medical evidence. She said that the Tribunal's expertise in
psychiatric
medicine had not been established (which may not have mattered if
the ground was otherwise made good).
- As
a general principle, the findings of fact by a court should be based on evidence
duly adduced at the trial. The court may take
into account its observations of a
party in the witness box, and outside the witness box in the court room subject
to the following
flexible and common sense rule by which -
" ... where the judge makes observations of the actions or
demeanour of a party, which actions and demeanour are not observable by
counsel,
and makes use of those observations in a way which has a significance influence
upon his decision of the case, he is required
in justice, before making such use
of those observations, to make those observations and the possibility of his
using them in the
course of his judgment known to counsel at a stage of the
hearing at which counsel still has an opportunity of dealing with them
in a
proper and effective way": Angaston and District Hospital v Thamm ( 1987)
47 SASR 177 at 178-9 per King CJ.
- This
general rule is to be applied according to the circumstances. Where the party is
unrepresented those circumstances include the
obvious fact that there is no
question of making the observations known to counsel who has not seen what the
judge saw; the party
knows his or her own conduct. No hard and fast rule can be
laid down - it is a question of fairness in the particular circumstances.
- The
Tribunal is not a court, and is not bound to observe the rules of law governing
admission of evidence and may inform itself of
any matter in such manner as it
thinks fit (cl 1 of Schedule 2 to the Act). It nonetheless commonly receives
evidence in a structured
hearing (see cll 2 et seq of Schedule 2), and its
inquiries into complaints and the orders it makes can significantly affect the
medical practitioner concerned. It was not disputed that procedural fairness had
to be afforded and that the general rule abovementioned
applied.
- However,
no denial of procedural fairness emerges from [89] of the Tribunal's reasons.
Contrary to the appellant's submission, what
the Tribunal there said was
concerned only with its observations of the appellant in the witness box. That
was expressly stated in
the first sentence, and was confirmed in the later
references to "much in her evidence and the way in which she gave it" and to the
appellant being found to be evasive "when being asked straightforward questions
about where she lived and where she had worked from
time to time". In speaking
particularly of its observations of evasiveness, this clearly enough was linked
with the Tribunal's comment
at [37], set out at [31] above, in relation to the
appellant's cross-examination. It was open to the Tribunal to take account of
its observations of evasiveness in the witness box as being congruent with Dr
Wright's evidence concerning evasiveness (see also
[35]), without specifically
drawing those observations to the appellant's attention. It was also open for it
to see congruence with
Dr Wright's impressions, such as perception of conflict
and difficulty in dealing with it, without specifically drawing its observations
to her attention. There was no diagnosis by the Tribunal of the appellant's
medical condition, but only regard to her conduct in
the witness box which it
found to be consistent with Dr Wright's observations of her. The observations
were noted after Dr Wright's
evidence had been accepted, as confirmatory of the
impressions on the basis of which he had reached his diagnosis.
Ground 4
- The
challenge was to the finding of impairment, more specifically to the finding
that the appellant suffered from a paranoid personality
disorder.
- The
ground evolved as it was developed. It was put as a failure in process in that
the Tribunal "did not seek to engage with the contents
of" the reports tendered
by the appellant; there was no "independent analysis or attempts to understand
and deal with" those reports;
the Tribunal had simply taken Dr Wright's view of
the reports "without itself looking at them and considering whether there was
more
that should be said"; and similar complaints. The submissions came at one
point to asserting that the Tribunal had not even read
part of a report on which
the appellant relied, but that was correctly withdrawn.
- I
intend no disrespect to the submissions in dealing with them briefly. The
Tribunal recognised the opinions in the reports on which
the appellant relied,
but for reasons readily available to it considered that their weight was limited
or compromised. It did not
fail to engage with the reports or their contents.
For reasons readily available to it, it preferred the opinion of Dr Wright. It
sufficiently explained its preference. If there was error, and I do not suggest
that there was, it was factual error. The appellant's
complaint was in truth
that the Tribunal had erred in the comparative weight it gave to the opinions of
Dr Wright over those of the
doctors on whose reports she relied. No error in
point of law has been shown.
Grounds 2 and 4
- These
grounds need not be considered individually. There was error in making a
deregistration order on the basis of the impairment
as found by the Tribunal.
- There
is some overlap between the two grounds for complaint in s 39 of the Act, being
lack of competence on the one hand and impairment
on the other. The definitions
of these terms have been set out at [20] above. A physical or mental impairment,
disability, condition
or disorder which detrimentally affects the
person's physical or mental capacity to practice medicine may mean that the
person does not have sufficient physical capacity,
mental capacity or skill to
practice medicine. But that is not necessarily so, and particularly it is not
necessarily so in the case
of a physical or mental impairment, disability,
condition or disorder which is likely to detrimentally affect the
person's physical or mental capacity to practice medicine. Thus in Lindsay v
Health Care Complaints Commission Sackville AJA observed at [169] that the
Tribunal "merely asserted, without further reasons, that by reason of his
impairment, the
appellant was not competent to practise medicine", and continued
-
" [170] The absence of further reasons supporting the finding of
lack of competence perhaps suggests that the Tribunal assumed that
the existence
of an impairment, at least of the kind attributed to the appellant, necessarily
meant that he lacked the mental capacity
or communication skills to practise
medicine. Such an assumption would be incorrect. Even a serious psychiatric
condition does not
necessarily lead to the conclusion that the medical
practitioner concerned lacks competence in the relevant sense. Whether it does
or not will depend on such considerations as the nature and likely duration of
the impairment, the kind of practice carried on by
the medical practitioner, the
extent to which the impairment interferes with the practitioner's judgment,
communication skills and
clinical ability, and other relevant circumstances."
- In
Lindsay v Health Care Complaints Commission it was held that, reading the
Tribunal's reasons as a whole, it addressed whether, and found that, the
practitioner's impairment precluded
appropriate communication with and treatment
of patients. I do not think the same can be said in the present case.
- It
will be recalled that the Committee had found that the appellant suffered from
an impairment "which detrimentally affects her physical
and mental capacity to
practice medicine". The finding of present effect on the appellant's capacity to
practice medicine was clear
from the body of the Committee's reasons, which
included -
"The practise of medicine involves more than just the application
of clinical knowledge. It involves the interaction of the doctor
with
colleagues, supervisors, patients and regulatory bodies. Dr Tung's impairment
clearly, detrimentally affects [sic] her ability
to do so. The evidence shows
significant detrimental affects [sic] in relation to Dr Tung's ability to be
supervised to work as directed,
to interact with colleagues and to abide by her
statutory responsibilities. These are fundamental to the practice of medicine,
particularly
given Dr Tung's level of training and experience."
- The
Tribunal came to a rather different finding as to impairment. The finding of
impairment at [104] was that the appellant's disorder
was "of a nature that
it will affect her capacity to practise medicine" (italics added). This was
a statement of futurity, reflecting "is likely to" in the definition
of
impairment. The futurity was evident in the body of the Tribunal's reasons. It
accepted at [100] Dr Wright's opinion that, although
there had been no
complaints about the appellant's clinical ability in terms of medical knowledge,
"given the stress attendant on
the practice of medicine as a doctor, it is
likely that her psychiatric state would eventually cause an impact on her
patients" (italics added). It described Dr Wright's opinion in this respect at
[92], in the particular context of
clinical ability: the description was
preceded by acceptance that the appellant's clinical competence had until then
not been questioned,
and can conveniently be repeated -
" 92 That the appellant had not received any complaints about her
clinical care did not cause Dr Wright to reconsider his opinion.
He said that
people with this disorder are able to keep it in check for a large part of the
time but decompensate under stress. His
concern for the appellant was that
sooner or later that type of stress would arise in a medical practice and
would probably impact on her ability to interact with patients. He took
into account that during her period in clinical practice, there had been
complaints
about her interactions with administrative and reception staff and
felt is [sic] was a small step to include the patients in that
interaction."
(italics added)
- The
Tribunal gave no reasons for moving from its finding of impairment to
satisfaction of any of the states in s 64(1) of the Act
entitling it to make a
deregistration order. Since the Tribunal was hearing an appeal from the
Chairperson's order clearly enough
made on the ground that the appellant was not
competent to practice medicine, lack of competence was the obvious path, and the
appeal
proceeded accordingly. However, quite apart from whether a complaint that
the appellant was not competent to practice medicine was
a prerequisite for the
exercise of the power in s 64(1)(a) (ground 2), it was necessary that the
appellant's impairment meant that
she did not presently have sufficient mental
capacity or other competence to practice medicine.
- Assuming
that it could have made a deregistration order if it had been satisfied that the
appellant was not competent to practice
medicine, when there had not been a
complaint that she was not competent to practice medicine, the Tribunal did not
address whether
the appellant did not have sufficient mental capacity or other
competence to practice medicine. I do not think that its reasons can
be read as
including sub silentio satisfaction that the appellant was not competent
to practise medicine.
- On
the contrary, given the futurity in the Tribunal's finding in my view it was not
open to the Tribunal to find that she was not
competent to practice medicine. No
doubt there is room for some futurity in the definition of competence to
practice medicine. It
is in terms of present capacity, but practice of medicine
is a continuum and a practitioner whose physical or mental deterioration
will
inevitably and soon make him or her incapable could be said to lack sufficient
physical or mental capacity to practice medicine.
That is not the present case.
The finding, understood in the light of the reasons as a whole, was one of
likelihood at an indefinite
future time. It could not properly be found that the
appellant did not presently have sufficient mental capacity or other competence
to practice medicine.
Ground 5
- I
have set out the appellant's grounds of appeal to the Tribunal. Within ground 2
was the contention that she should not have suffered
deregistration if the
complaints were found proved. That was an issue for the Tribunal.
- While
it was not a prominent issue in the proceedings before the Tribunal, there was
clearly enough a live question whether (assuming
that it could do so) a finding
of impairment should lead to deregistration. The appellant's opening statement
to the Tribunal included,
referring to the reports of Dr Wright, that she had
not suffered and was not suffering from impairment of her clinical functioning.
Counsel for the first respondent particularly asked Dr Wright in oral evidence
to explain how he took into account, in coming to
his opinion, that there was no
direct evidence of impaired patient treatment by the appellant and whether he
could propose conditions
for the appellant's practice of medicine. His response
was that it presented a difficulty, which he then elaborated. Counsel for
the
first respondent submitted to the Tribunal in closing submissions that it would
be difficult to fashion conditions to accommodate
the appellant's condition as
well as the need to protect the public. The appellant's closing submissions
included posing whether
and how a paranoid personality disorder would affect her
work.
- I
do not suggest that a separate hearing was necessarily required (see Lucire v
Health Care Complaints Commission (2011) NSWCA 99 at [60] per Basten JA,
McColl JA and Sackville AJA agreeing). However, it was necessary that, if it was
satisfied that the appellant was
not competent to practice medicine (or as to
one of the other states in s 64(1)(a) of the Act entitling it to make a
deregistration
order), the Tribunal address whether deregistration rather than
some lesser disciplinary action was the appropriate course, and explain
why it
took the course of deregistration. It did not do so. It may have been thought
that, since it was an appeal from the Chairperson's
deregistration order, the
order would stand if the Tribunal found the complaints proved. If so, that was
not correct. The Tribunal
was conducting a rehearing in which the appropriate
order(s) was in issue.
- There
was error in this respect also. Had the Tribunal addressed the matter, it may be
that the error considered under grounds 2 and
4 would not have occurred.
The result
- The
Tribunal's finding of impairment stands. This Court can exercise the Tribunal's
powers (s 91(1)(b)), but it is less well placed
than the Tribunal to undertake
that consideration and it was not suggested that it should. The Tribunal must
reconsider the order(s)
to be made, short of a deregistration order, consequent
on its findings.
- It
is not necessary to consider the competing submissions concerning ground 2. In
summary, the appellant submitted that even if the
Tribunal was satisfied that
she was not competent to practice medicine, it could not make a deregistration
order because there had
to be satisfaction "when it finds on a complaint about
the person" (s 64(1) chapeau), and the complaint had to be a complaint that
the
practitioner was not competent to practice medicine. Equally in summary, the
first respondent submitted that it was sufficient
that the finding was on a
complaint about the practitioner which fairly carried the finding, whether or
not the complaint was that
the practitioner was not competent to practice
medicine. Lindsay v Health Care Complaints Commission may favour the
first respondent on its facts, although the question did not arise. There was
reference in submissions to cl 5(2) of
Schedule 2 of the Act, which enabled the
Tribunal to "take that" another complaint had been referred to it, and to s 38A
by which
a reference to a complaint included a reference to a matter arising out
of the investigation of a complaint. The question will not
arise in the
Tribunal's reconsideration, and can await decision if it arises in another case.
- The
Tribunal's orders, including its costs order, should be set aside, and the
matter should be remitted to the Tribunal for the reconsideration
abovementioned. Although it was not the subject of submissions, I apprehend that
the Chairperson's deregistration order will remain
in place when the Tribunal's
orders are set aside, so that the appellant will remain deregistered until the
Tribunal makes its orders
(s 87(6)). It is obviously desirable that the
Tribunal's reconsideration take place without undue delay.
Orders
- I
propose the following orders -
(1) Appeal against the Tribunal's finding as to impairment
dismissed.
(2) Appeal against the orders made by the Tribunal allowed.
(3) Set aside the orders made by the Tribunal on 11 March 2010.
(4) Remit the matter to the Tribunal for reconsideration of the order(s) (if
any) to be made consequent on its findings.
(5) First respondent to pay the appellant's costs of the appeal.
- CAMPBELL
JA : I agree with Giles JA.
- TOBIAS
AJA : I agree with Giles JA.
**********
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