Professor, Auckland Law School, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Law Med. 2023 Dec;30(4):822-838.
Given the absence of a civil damages action for personal injury in New Zealand, its Health and Disability Commissioner's (HDC) complaints process occupies a pivotal role in its medico-legal arrangements. Much hope was invested in it, but as currently configured, the regime is incapable of delivering justice or fulfilling its legislative purpose in a good number of cases. Many hundreds of complaints per annum, in which there is a strongly arguable case of deficient conduct or more than a mild departure from acceptable standards and in which a serious outcome has resulted, are not fully investigated; and there is no mechanism to appeal an adverse HDC decision that a party considers substantively unfair. Recent criticism of these issues by courts, the Chief Ombudsman, and commentators has mounted, and a petition to Parliament seeking legislative reform to create a right to appeal from adverse HDC decisions resulted in referral of the issue to the Commissioner to consider in an upcoming review, but hoped-for reform will not happen quickly.
鉴于新西兰不存在人身伤害的民事损害赔偿诉讼,其卫生和残疾专员(HDC)的投诉程序在其医疗法律安排中占据着关键地位。人们对它寄予厚望,但就目前的配置而言,该制度在许多案件中都无法实现正义或履行其立法目的。每年有数百起投诉,其中有一个强有力的论点,即存在行为不当或严重偏离可接受标准的情况,而且结果严重,但这些投诉并没有得到充分调查;并且没有机制可以对一方认为实质性不公平的不利 HDC 决定提出上诉。最近,法院、首席调查官和评论员对这些问题提出了批评,有人向议会请愿,要求立法改革,为对不利的 HDC 决定提出上诉创造权利,这导致该问题被移交给专员,以便在即将进行的审查中审议,但人们希望的改革不会很快发生。