Making A Complaint About A Doctor: A Guide For Patients
Making A Complaint About A Doctor: A Guide For Patients
Making A Complaint About A Doctor: A Guide For Patients
about a doctor
A guide for patients
A
Plain ..
English
Approved by NALA
Contents
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About this booklet
This booklet tells you what to do if you want to make a complaint about a doctor. Under
the Medical Practitioners Act, 2007 (‘the Act’), the Medical Council is responsible “for
protecting the public by promoting and better ensuring high standards of professional
conduct and professional education, training and competence among doctors”.
If you are not satisfied with your doctor, or if you have concerns about the behaviour,
conduct, practice or health of a doctor, you can contact the Medical Council.
The Medical Council is the legal registration authority for doctors in Ireland. If a doctor
wants to practise medicine in this country, he or she must be registered with the Medical
Council.
If you want to check whether your doctor is registered or not, you can do this on the
Medical Council’s website:
www.medicalcouncil.ie/registration/check.asp
The Medical Council’s Preliminary Proceedings Committee (PPC) is responsible for looking
at complaints against doctors.
The complaints process is designed to look into the information that you and the doctor
give us. We then decide whether we need to take any further action in relation to the
doctor’s registration.
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Who can complain?
Anyone can make a complaint to the Medical Council about a doctor. This includes
members of the public, employers and other healthcare staff. The Medical Council itself
may also make a complaint about a doctor to the PPC.
If you are making a complaint for another person, such as your husband or wife, partner,
brother or sister, that person may need to consent to your making the complaint for them,
as the complaint may include confidential medical information.
Offences that are triable on indictment are usually serious offences, for example sexual
assault or fraud, and are tried before a judge and jury in court. As there can be a
number of exceptions, we advise you to get advice for your particular complaint if you
are making it for this reason.
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How can I make a complaint?
You can make a complaint by completing a copy of the Medical Council’s complaint form.
This form will help you to make your complaint about a doctor to the Medical Council.
You can download the complaint form from www.medicalcouncil.ie and email it to
complaints@mcirl.ie.
The Medical Council can only deal with written complaints. If you cannot access the
complaint form, you should submit your complaint in writing by email to
complaints@mcirl.ie or by post to:
Professional Standards
Medical Council, Kingram House, Kingram Place, Dublin 2
The Preliminary Proceedings Committee (PPC) will then look into your complaint and may
ask for more information or documents from you, the doctor or other people involved,
such as a hospital or employer. The PPC may send you the information or documents it
gets from the doctor for your information and response if it believes that it would help
before making a decision on your complaint. The PPC has the power to get documents to
help it make its decision. The case officer assigned to the complaint will contact you about
any decisions made by the PPC.
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When the PPC is satisfied that it has enough information, it will then decide what action
to take:
(a) If the PPC believes that there is a case to take further action it will refer the
complaint to the Fitness to Practise Committee for an inquiry.
or
(b) If the PPC decides not to refer the complaint to the Fitness to Practise Committee
it will give an opinion to the Medical Council that:
The PPC does not decide on the facts of the complaint, nor does it decide whether the
complaint is proven. It only provides an opinion to the Medical Council about what
action the Council should take about the complaint.
The PPC will report its opinion to the Medical Council at the next available opportunity.
When looking at the PPC’s opinion, the Medical Council may decide:
not to take any further action; or
to tell the PPC to refer the complaint to another body or authority or to a
professional competence scheme; or
to refer the complaint to be resolved by mediation or other informal methods; or
to tell the PPC to refer the complaint to the Fitness to Practise Committee for an
inquiry.
The Medical Council cannot look into the same complaint twice. It cannot
review any decision it has made or refer the complaint back to the PPC.
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What is mediation?
The PPC may give an opinion to Medical Council that the complaint could be resolved by
mediation. The PPC may do this if it believes, after looking at the circumstances of the
complaint, that it would be possible to restore the doctor-patient relationship.
Mediation is a process where two or more people agree to the appointment of a neutral
third person called a mediator to help them resolve a dispute.
Section 62 of the Act deals with mediation. When the Medical Council gets the PPC’s
opinion, it can refer the complaint for mediation. This can only be done if both you and
the doctor (or doctors) agree to use mediation to resolve your complaint.
If the Medical Council decides that your complaint could be resolved by mediation, we
will write to you and explain how the process works.
If the PPC refers the complaint to the Fitness to Practise Committee for an inquiry, we will
try to give you an idea of:
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What happens at the inquiry?
The Fitness to Practise Committee hearing the inquiry is normally made up of three
people: two non-medical and one medical. A legal adviser, known as a Legal Assessor,
sits with the Committee. The Legal Assessor does not take part in making decisions, but
he or she advises and informs the Committee and the other people involved about the law
and procedure.
Inquiries can be held in public. This means that members of the public, including
journalists, can attend. A stenographer will also be there to record the evidence and to
produce a written record of everything said at the inquiry.
All or part of the inquiry may be held in private if the Fitness to Practise Committee
believes that this would be appropriate. Any witness attending the inquiry to give
evidence or the doctor involved can apply to hold some or all of the inquiry in private.
A solicitor or counsel representing the Chief Executive Officer of the Medical Council will
normally open the inquiry by presenting the evidence and calling witnesses, including the
person who made the complaint, to give evidence. The doctor or their legal
representative may question the witnesses on their evidence. The Committee may also
ask some questions. After the solicitor or counsel acting for the Chief Executive Officer
has finished presenting the case, the doctor or their legal representative may call
witnesses or make statements to the Committee.
At the end of the inquiry, the Committee will normally leave the room to decide whether
the allegations have been proven. The Committee will usually return to the room to give
its findings, and will write a report of the findings and the reasons for them.
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When do I have to make a statement and give evidence?
When you make a complaint about a doctor and the Preliminary Proceedings Committee
(PPC) decides to refer the case for an inquiry, we will need to meet with you and take a
witness statement. You will have a chance to look at your statement and make any
changes before the inquiry starts.
It is likely that you will need to give evidence at the inquiry. The Fitness to Practise
Committee can issue witness summons to make the person who made the complaint
and other witnesses give evidence at an inquiry. The Fitness to Practise Committee also
has the power to get any documents it needs for the inquiry.
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What can the Medical Council not do?
The Medical Council can only look into complaints about individual doctors. We cannot:
look into complaints about any other healthcare staff such as nurses, dentists,
social workers;
give legal or professional advice or representation to people making complaints;
look into complaints about hospitals, clinics or other healthcare organisations;
help you make a claim for compensation;
give or arrange medical treatment or counselling for you;
contact a doctor for you and ask him or her to do something such as forward a
medical report or write a prescription;
make a doctor apologise to you; or
give you a detailed explanation of what happened to you. This can only come from
the doctor or the relevant healthcare organisation.
Is my information confidential?
We understand that making a complaint can be stressful. When we are looking at your
complaint, we have to tell the doctor or doctors that you have made a complaint and we
have to give them a copy of your complaint.
If you want to talk about any part of the complaints procedure, you can contact the
Professional Standards Department on the telephone number or e-mail address below:
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Glossary
You may not be familiar with some of the terms used in this leaflet. We have explained
these below.
Evidence – what a witness says at the inquiry and documentary evidence, including
photographs, that are brought before an inquiry
Legal assessor – a Senior Counsel who advises the Fitness to Practise Committee
Sanction – the type of penalty that the Medical Council can put on a doctor
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Other organisations that regulate healthcare staff
Here is a list of organisations that can look into complaints about other healthcare staff.
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Complaints about clinical biochemists, medical scientists, psychologists,
chiropodists and podiatrists, dieticians, orthoptists, physiotherapists,
radiographers, speech and language therapists, occupational therapists,
social care workers and social workers
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Medical Council
Kingram House, Kingram Place, Dublin 2. Tel:
+353 1 4983100. Fax: +353 1 4983102.
Email: info@mcirl.ie
www.medicalcouncil.ie