Independent and Impartial Tribunal

Author(s):  
Kenneth Hamer

N, a professor and consultant in obstetrics of international repute, appeared before the Professional Conduct Committee (PCC) of the General Medical Council (GMC) in May 1998. The charge was dismissed, but, in the course of N’s evidence on oath, it was alleged that he lied to the Committee. The matter was referred to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which decided that there was insufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction of perjury. However, a second disciplinary hearing took place with a different panel in November/December 2000. The second panel found that N had given a patently incorrect answer under oath and that he was guilty of serious professional misconduct; the panel issued what it described as the severest of reprimands.

Author(s):  
Kenneth Hamer

The claimant was a retired medical practitioner and sought judicial review to challenge the decision of the Professional Conduct Committee (PCC) of the General Medical Council (GMC) in the course of a preliminary hearing to refuse his application for voluntary erasure from the medical register. Had he been allowed to erase his name voluntarily, the proceedings would have been stayed. The complaint against the claimant related to five patients during his performance as a doctor. It was alleged that the claimant made specific and individual errors, and that the standards of his work were so low, and the errors so gross, that they amounted to serious professional misconduct.


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 207-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fiona Subotsky

In 2004 I was asked by the College first to respond to the Inquiry's questions and later to attend a ‘stakeholders' meeting’. This was not so much in my capacity as Treasurer but as an officer with an interest in the issue of risk and professional difficulties for psychiatrists. A review of the public reports from the General Medical Council (GMC) of their determinations in the Professional Conduct Committee had made it evident that sexual misconduct was probably the single greatest cause of a finding of serious professional misconduct against a psychiatrist. In addition, I had contributed to an earlier debate on sexual safety for women in psychiatric hospitals (Subotsky, 1991, 1993).


2016 ◽  
Vol 98 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
PJ Benson

'Oh what a tangled web we weave, When first we practise to deceive.’ Sir Walter Scott (Marmion, 1808) Think of scientific misconduct in the UK and Malcolm Pearce – one of the most high-profile cases – comes immediately to mind. Malcolm Pearce was an assistant editor of the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, and a senior lecturer at St George's Medical School, when two fraudulent papers were published in the journal. A whistleblower at the hospital was the catalyst for an investigation that led to Pearce being fired, found guilty of serious professional misconduct by the General Medical Council, and struck off.1 The professor of the department, Geoffrey Chamberlain, who was also President of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and Editor of the journal, resigned from both positions as he was named as an author on one of the fraudulent papers. He reportedly did not know that his name was on the manuscript and, in his defence, it was not unusual at the time for Heads of Department to have ‘gift’ authorship on the department’s publications, despite not making any contribution. Regardless, both were disgraced. Scientific misconduct has many faces and its true prevalence is unknown, although many agree that it is increasing. Is it because researchers are committing more publication crimes, or are we just better at discovering them? In the race to find a home for articles, are authors getting lazy, sloppy and making more mistakes? In the era of online publications reaching wider audiences, mistakes are easier to detect and report, and beware if Clare Francis stumbles across such misdemeanours… Since 2010 an individual (or perhaps even a group) whose gender, identity and occupation are unknown, but who operate under the name ‘Clare Francis’, has upped the ante and flagged hundreds of suspected cases of potential fraud across the globe. Notorious among journal editors as a relentless whistleblower and crusader against text and image fraud, some of Francis’ tips have resulted in corrections and retractions. For example, a 2006 paper in the Journal of Cell Biology was retracted after Francis raised concerns years after publication about image manipulation, which were validated by the publisher. .2 But why does it happen? Why not? Researchers are human and subject to the same frailties as in other walks of life. If a measure of a good academic is solely the number of articles they have published, then – when quantity is rewarded over quality – scientific misconduct may reveal a glimpse of the pressure researchers are under. It is worth remembering that, despite the stress of the ‘publish or perish’ culture, scientific misconduct is unacceptable in any guise and likely to be discovered, with embarrassing if not downright career- and reputation-destroying consequences. Good publishing etiquette is ultimately down to the integrity and moral sensibilities of researchers and authors. In this excellent article about some of the ‘sins’ of publishing, Philippa Benson, who has kindly written for this series before, provides a thought-provoking insight into scientific misconduct. Jyoti Shah Commissioning Editor References Lock S. Lessons from the Pearce affair: handling scientific fraud. BMJ 1995; 310: 1,547. Retraction notice. J Cell Biol 2013; 200: 359. doi:10.1083/jcb.2005070832003r.


2021 ◽  
pp. 203-213
Author(s):  
Lucian L. Leape

AbstractIn 1997, Britons were shocked by a report from the General Medical Council (GMC) of a series of deaths from bungled surgery at the Bristol Royal Infirmary. In response to parents’ complaints, the GMC had launched an investigation into the high mortality of cardiac surgery of children at the Infirmary. It found that of 53 children who were operated on, 29 had died and 4 suffered severe brain damage. Three surgeons were found guilty of serious professional misconduct, and two were stricken from the medical register [1].


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 543-548
Author(s):  
Ikechukwu Obialo Azuonye

In the medical profession a consultant is a doctor who has attained the capacity for totally independent practice, otherwise known as clinical freedom. Consultants differ from other doctors in the important respect that they have full clinical responsibility (BMA, 1984). The work of the consultant may be audited by his peers, with his full participation, but may not be supervised by one (DoH, 1989a). Thus, whereas the consultant is accountable, administratively, to his employers, in the clinical area, he is not accountable to any other doctors or managers: he is accountable to the General Medical Council for his professional conduct, and, with respect to the diagnosis and treatment of illness, to the patients directly, the patients' relatives, and the law of the land.


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