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Public Hospital Liability

Public Hospital Liability

The physician working within a public hospital is not personally responsible for the damages caused to the patient by their fault.

 

Indeed, they act as an agent of the administration, and the patient is considered a user of a public service. Therefore, only the responsibility of the public institution can be engaged.

 

When the physician has committed a personal fault, separate from their duties, they may be held liable, but only in that specific case.

 

A personal fault separate from their duties is considered by jurisprudence as a fault of particular seriousness that cannot reasonably be attributed to the functioning of the service. This may include, for example, a fault committed with intent to harm, for personal gain, or a fault that would be inexcusable from a professional ethical standpoint.

 

Since the law of March 4, 2002, the administrative responsibility of public health institutions can be engaged under Article L1142-1 of the Public Health Code, just as the responsibility of private professionals and health establishments can be engaged. Thus, except in exceptional cases mentioned in Article 1142-1, the administrative responsibility of the public health institution can only be engaged if the patient provides proof of a fault, a damage, and a causal link between the two.

 

A medical expert assessment will be necessary to provide evidence of this fault. In principle, no judge will rule on medical responsibility without first having the informed opinion of a specialized expert in the field. The competent jurisdictions to handle administrative responsibility for public health establishments are, in the first instance, the administrative court, on appeal, the administrative court of appeal, and, if necessary, the Council of State.

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