Q.
If I suffer from Nervous Breakdown after witnessing a patient dying on the OT Table with overdose of adrenaline negligent of the attending doctor. Can I claim my suffering from his negligence?
A.
The two issues at hand here are:
Negligence - Tort - Doctor's Negligence to patient who died.
Nervous Shock - Negligence - Tort - Doctor's Negligence causing Nervous Breakdown to Bystander.
1. First Party - Primary Victim - the patient who died.
2. Second Party - Secondary Victim - me.
There are various write-ups on the Nervous Shock in Tort Law. One good one is linked here.
The way to answer this type of negligence question can be best referred to the write up below.
Law School Online: Step by step guide to answering negligence problem questions.
From Wikipedia, the extract is as below:
In English law, a nervous shock is a psychiatric illness or injury inflicted upon a person by intentional or negligent actions or omissions of another. Often it is a psychiatric disorder triggered by witnessing an accident, for example an injury caused to one's parents or spouse. Although the term "nervous shock" has been described as "inaccurate" and "misleading",[1] it continues to be applied as a useful abbreviation for a complex concept. The possibility of recovering damages for nervous shock, particularly caused by negligence, is strongly limited in English law.
Definition[edit]
Intentionally inflicted nervous shock[edit]
Negligently inflicted nervous shock[edit]
- The existence of a duty of care, i.e. the duty on the part of the defendant not to inflict nervous shock upon the claimant;
- A breach of that duty, i.e. the defendant's actions or omissions in the circumstances fell below what would be expected from a reasonable person in the circumstances.
- A causal link between the breach and the psychiatric illness, i.e. the nervous shock was the direct consequence of the defendant's breach of duty;
- The nervous shock was not too remote a consequence of the breach.
Primary victims[edit]
Secondary victims[edit]
- The claimant must perceive a "shocking event" with his own unaided senses, as an eye-witness to the event, or hearing the event in person, or viewing its "immediate aftermath". This requires close physical proximity to the event, and would usually exclude events witnessed by television or informed of by a third party.
- The shock must be a "sudden" and not a "gradual" assault on the claimant's nervous system. So a claimant who develops a depression from living with a relative debilitated by the accident will not be able to recover damages.
- If the nervous shock is caused by witnessing the death or injury or another person the claimant must show a "sufficiently proximate" relationship to that person, usually described as a "close tie of love and affection". Such ties are presumed to exist only between parents and children, as well as spouses and fiancés. In other relations, including siblings, ties of love and affection must be proved.
- It must be reasonably foreseeable that a person of "normal fortitude" in the claimant’s position would suffer psychiatric damage. The closer the tie between the claimant and the victim, the more likely it is that he would succeed in this element. However, once it is shown that some psychiatric damage was foreseeable, it does not matter that the claimant was particularly susceptible to psychiatric illness - the defendant must "take his victim as he finds him" and pay for all the consequences of nervous shock (see "Eggshell skull" rule). A mere bystander can therefore hardly count on compensation for psychiatric shock, unless he had witnessed something so terrible that anybody could be expected to suffer psychiatric injury as a result. However, it seems that such a case is purely theoretic (see McFarlane v. EE Caledonia Ltd, where the plaintiff witnessed an explosion of a rig where he and his colleagues worked, but received no compensation).
Leading cases[edit]
- Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1992] 1 A.C. 310
- White v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police [1999] 2 A.C. 455
Ref:
Wikipedia search 'negligence nervous shock', available at
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nervous_shock_in_English_law