Consultant found guilty of poor professional performance in treatment of patient

Medical Council to consider sanctions

Dr Colm Quigley, a former president of the Medical Council, arriving at a Medical Council hearing at the Nursing Board offices in Blackrock, Co Dublin this morning. Photograph: Dave Meehan
Dr Colm Quigley, a former president of the Medical Council, arriving at a Medical Council hearing at the Nursing Board offices in Blackrock, Co Dublin this morning. Photograph: Dave Meehan

Colin Gleeson

A former president of the Irish Hospital Consultants' Association has been found guilty on five counts of "poor professional performance" by a committee of the Medical Council at a fitness to practice inquiry, which concluded yesterday.

Dr Colm Quigley is the clinical director at Wexford General Hospital and is himself a former president of the Medical Council. The charges are distinct from the more serious accusation of "professional misconduct".

The findings will now be forwarded to the board of the Medical Council who will deliberate and decide on what sanctions - if any - will be imposed on Dr Quigley.

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The charges relate to the case of a patient - known only as Patient X - who was referred by his GP to Dr Quigley's private clinic at the Ely Hospital at Ferrybank, Co Wexford on August 27, 2009.

Patient X was said to have been suffering from a number of complaints including low sodium in the blood.

After the consultation, Dr Quigley wrote to Patient X's GP and said he would be carrying out a series of tests on Patient X. These tests were never carried out.

Patient X died of inoperable lung cancer on April 16, 2011. There is no allegation that Dr Quigley caused deterioration in the patient's health or in any way contributed to his death.

Dr Quigley told the inquiry he believed subsequent examination of medical records had shown Patient X had not contracted the cancer that killed him in 2010 - and so the missing tests in 2009 could not have revealed it.

The committee however found Dr Quigley was guilty of "poor professional performance" in failing to arrange the tests, failing to recognize the tests had not been carried out, and failing to have "any adequate system" in place for tracking or monitoring tests.

He also failed to "respond adequately" to letters and phone calls by Patient X, his wife, and his GP enquiring as to why the tests had not yet been carried out.

During closing statements, Neasa Bird, for the Medical Council, said Dr Quigley had been unable to provide an explanation or excuse as to why the series of tests were not carried out.

The crux of Ms Bird's case hung on the argument that Dr Quigley had not been responsible for one mistake, but "a series of errors over a long period of time". She said this amounted to a case of poor professional performance.

In his closing statement, Paul Anthony McDermott, counsel for Dr Quigley, said his client's position was the same as it had been from the outset - that "a mistake" had occurred. He said Dr Quigley had an otherwise "unblemished" record.

"What this case does establish is that paper-based systems can go wrong.

Ireland is moving towards computer-based systems which should ensure that something like this never happens again."

He said it was "ironic" that Dr Quigley was the subject of an inquiry having "spent much of his time protecting patients in the role as clinical director (at Wexford General Hospital)".

Concerning allegations from the Medical Council that Dr Quigley had implicated himself with an admission that his handling of Patient X had "fallen below (his) standards", Mr McDermott said this was "unfair".

"His standards are unusually high and he has been a perfectionist. It's unfair to turn that approach on him and use his own evidence to condemn him. He said 'I wanted to do better' and that is being used against him."

The committee heard that Dr Quigley has made "significant changes" to his practice, including the reduction of the number of patients he sees. "He is making changes to make sure this never happens again," added Mr McDermott.

Dr Quigley was found guilty of "poor professional performance" on five allegations. There were four other counts on which he was found not guilty.

Colin Gleeson

Colin Gleeson

Colin Gleeson is an Irish Times reporter