DoH 'like a criminal dictating his sentence' over fixed costs

lundi 1 mai 2017

Efforts to reduce the cost of negligence claims to the NHS will be futile without wider reforms of the process, lawyers have warned. The Association of Personal Injury Lawyers today questioned the government’s plans to set fixed fees for clinical negligence claims and insisted they will do little to cut spending.

The Department of Health is consulting on introducing fixed fees for claims worth up to £25,000, with the consultation closing today.

Neil Sugarman

APIL president Neil Sugarman (pictured) likened the DoH, as the defendant in these claims, to a ‘criminal dictating the length of his sentence’. He stressed that fixing costs did little to alleviate problems that cause costs to rise, including long waiting times for the recovery of medical records and ‘arduous’ expert reports.

Sugarman said: ‘It is pointless to impose fixed costs for clinical negligence work without fixing the process first. A fixed, predictable claims process needs to be developed, rather than imposing fixed costs on the existing, dysfunctional system.’

APIL proposed fixed costs should apply where only defendants admit liability in the letter of response. This should follow the claimant submitting an abbreviated expert report early on in the process so NHS trusts can decide whether to make an offer to settle.

It also wants cases of fatalities, cases where claimants have a short life expectancy, claims which include an allegation of breach of the Human Rights Act, and cases in which there are multiple litigants, to be exempt from the fixed costs regime.

Claimant firm Hodge Jones & Allen said  the government’s consultation is based on ‘inaccurate cost estimates, fanciful time analysis and flawed logic’. It pointed to the DoH suggesting expert evidence in cases worth up to £25,000 can be obtained for under £1,200 and that particulars of claim in complex cases can be drafted by junior fee earners.

The firm said the proposals were premature, coming so soon after the civil justice reforms of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act, and the ongoing inquiry by the National Audit Office into spending by the NHS Litigation Authority (now rebranded as NHS Resolution).

Meanwhile, defence organisation the Medical Protection Society, which has argued for fixed fees to apply to cases worth £250,000, says the public backs efforts to curb NHS spending on legal costs.

According to a YouGov survey of 2,000 adults, 82% of people do not agree lawyers should receive more in legal fees than victims receive in compensation, and 81% support fixed costs for lawyers.

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DoH 'like a criminal dictating his sentence' over fixed costs

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