ABU DHABI — The federal medical liability draft law defining negligence, malpractices and misconduct of the healthcare sector was recently forwarded to the cabinet and it is likely to be enforced during the coming few months after its approval, according to an official source at the Ministry of Justice.
The draft law, the source pointed out, stipulates appropriate compensation for
victims who suffer due to any medical negligence and mistakes by doctors. The
hospitals in the country will be obliged to ensure the services of the doctors
so that the victims of medical negligence are entitled to compensation
instantaneously.
The draft law accurately specifies kinds of medical accountability and suitable
penalties against wrongdoers and health institutions found negligent, said the
source, adding the draft law ensures that patients could get their full rights
in case they are exposed to any medical mistakes and also guarantees the
confidentiality of patients' records.
The medical error law is extremely important for both doctors and patients as
it ensures the two parties providing and receiving medical services safely and
without fear, Dr Emad Abbood, Head of Gynaecology and Obstetrics at Al Noor
Hospital, told Khaleej Times.
Elaborating, he said, some physicians might refrain from performing a certain
operation lest they fail and are forced to pay huge amounts as compensation.
Therefore, insurance in advanced countries like the UK and the US is necessary
and costs too much, he said.
He said that most of medical errors were made either in surgeries or delivery
operations, where the baby might be born with paralysed arm, or die.
Therefore, insurance on these operations is the costliest, as it ranges between
$60,000 and $70,000 in the US. This explains why most of the doctors choose to
specialise in less risky areas of medicine.
He said the new law will be beneficial for the healthcare sector.
“I had filed a lawsuit against a doctor for causing my father to become half-paralysed
due to a medicine he had prescribed to him by mistake,” Mohammed Hafez, an
expatriate said.
Three years have passed, but no final court verdict was issued, because there
was no law on medical errors to ensure the rights of patients.
Everyone is in need of this law, which ensures hiring of competent doctors as
insurance companies will not insure the doctor who commits many mistakes, Alia
Badri, a government employee, said.
"I believe that the law would count the number of mistakes the doctor might
commit, and if the errors exceed the set limits, his/her name will be struck off
from the doctors’ record," she said.
"This means that we will be well looked after by expert and efficient doctors,"
she said.