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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Simawi v General Medical Council [2020] EWHC 2168 (Admin) (11 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/2168.html Cite as: [2021] 1 WLR 110, [2020] Med LR 587, [2020] EWHC 2168 (Admin), [2020] WLR(D) 469 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
1 Bridge Street West, Manchester, M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DR MUKHLIS AZIZ ABID SIMAWI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GENERAL MEDICAL COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Alexis Hearnden (instructed by GMC Legal) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 15 July 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Julian Knowles:
Introduction
The factual background
Summary
Allegations
"Study Leave Application
1. After accepting an offer of employment at King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust ('the Trust') in or around December 2016, you sent an email to Dr A on 31 December 2016 advising him that you:
a. would be abroad attending a conference between 20 and 27 February 2017; Admitted and found proved
b. had made arrangements to attend the conference in early 2016. Admitted and found proved
2. On 5 January 2017 you sent an email to Ms B informing her that you would be attending a conference and asked for it to be accommodated on your rota as leave. Admitted and found proved
3. You knew that you had not arranged to attend a conference between 20 and 27 February 2017. To be determined
4. Your actions at paragraph 1 and 2 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 3. To be determined
5. On or around 13 February 2017 you submitted to the Trust:
a. an application for study leave for a conference called '5th Symposium in Anaesthetics and ICM' in Dresden-Legnica, Germany, ('the Dresden Conference'); To be determined
b. email confirmation from Mr C at '[email protected]' dated 6 September 2016 purporting to be for registration and payment to attend the Dresden Conference; To be determined
c. a programme purporting to be for the Dresden Conference ('the Dresden Programme'). To be determined
6. You knew that the documents that you submitted as described at paragraph 5 above were falsified in that you knew that the:
a. Dresden Conference was fabricated; To be determined
b. email address of Mr C was not in use; To be determined
c. organisation 'ccage' did not exist; To be determined
d. Dresden Programme was a copy of another conference programme. To be determined
7. Your actions described at paragraph 5 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 6. To be determined
8. You took study leave from the Trust for the Dresden Conference. To be determined
9. Your action described at paragraph 8 was dishonest by reason of paragraph 6(a). To be determined."
Investigation by the Trust
10. On or around 1 March 2017 you confirmed to the Trust that:
a. you had attended a conference; Admitted and found proved
b. the conference location had been changed to take place in Krakow, Poland ('the Krakow Conference'). Admitted and found proved
11. Your statements as described at paragraph 10 were:
a. untrue; To be determined
b. known by you to be untrue. To be determined
12. Your actions at paragraph 10 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 11. To be determined
13. On 1 March 2017 you sent an email to Dr D in which you:
a. attached a document that purported to be an attendance certificate for the Krakow Conference ('the Certificate'), which:
i. was signed and dated 27 February 2017; Admitted and found proved
ii. included a stamp logo of the District Medical Chamber in Krakow ('the Chamber'); Amended under Rule 17(6) Admitted and found proved
b. told Dr D that you were 'a member of Polish Medical Chamber in Krakow', or words to that effect. Admitted and found proved
14. You knew that the Certificate was falsified in that the Chamber did not:
a. organise and/or co-organise the Krakow Conference; To be determined
b. issue the Certificate; To be determined
c. sign the Certificate; To be determined
d.stamp the Certificate. authorise the use of their logo Amended under Rule 17(6); To be determined
15. You knew that the statement as set out at paragraph 13(b) above was untrue in that you knew that you were not a member of a Medical Chamber in Poland at that time. To be determined
16. Your actions described at paragraph:
a. (13a) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 14; To be determined
b. (13b) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 15. To be determined
17. On or around 1 June 2017 you submitted to the Trust a document purporting to be a programme for the Krakow Conference ('the Krakow Programme'). Admitted and found proved' or 'To be determined'Withdrawn by the GMC
18. On or around 20 October 2017 you submitted to the Trust a:
a. Google search screenshot purporting to show the Krakow Conference website, www.krakow-anaesthesia.pl; Admitted and found proved
b.furthercopy of the document purporting to be a programme for the Krakow Conference ('the Krakow Programme'); Amended under Rule 17(6): To be determined
c. document purporting to be a transaction confirmation for the Krakow Conference. Admitted and found proved
19. You knew that the documents that you submitted as described at paragraphs 17 and/or18 above were falsified in that you knew that the Amended under Rule 17(6) a. website described at paragraph 18
a. was created after 27 February 2017; To be determined
b. Krakow Programme content was a copy of one or more other conference programmes; To be determined
c. Krakow Conference did not take place. To be determined
20. Your actions described at paragraph17 and/or18 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 19. Amended under Rule 17(6); To be determined
21. On 25 July 2017 you informed Ms B by text message that the Trust rota was incorrect as your leave between 20 and 27 February 2017 was annual leave as you were not entitled to study leave at the Trust, or words to that effect. Admitted and found proved
22. Your statement as described at paragraph 21 was untrue in that you:
a. knew that you were entitled to study leave as set out in the Trust's Terms and Conditions, which you had signed; To be determined
b. had submitted an application for study leave as described at paragraph 5(a) above. To be determined
23. Your actions as described at paragraph 21 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 22. To be determined
Interim Orders Tribunal
24. On 29 November 2017 you submitted a defence bundle to the GMC for the purpose of an Interim Orders Tribunal ('IOT'), which included emails dated 19 October 2017 from:
a. Mr C; Admitted and found proved
b. Ms E. Admitted and found proved
25. You knew that the emails described at paragraphs 24(a) and 24(b) above contained false information as neither the Dresden Conference nor Krakow Conference took place. To be determined
26. Your actions as described at paragraph 24 were dishonest by reason of paragraph 25. To be determined
Failure to disclose GMC Investigation and Interim Order
27. On 20 December 2017 you submitted an application for a post of Senior Clinical Fellow in Anaesthetics at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust in which you answered 'No' to the question:
a. 'Are you currently subject to a fitness to practise investigation and/or proceedings of any nature by a regulatory or licensing body in the UK or in any other country?' Admitted and found proved
b. 'Have you ever been removed from the register, or have conditions or sanctions been placed on your registration, or have you been issued with a warning by a regulatory or licensing body in the UK or in any other country? Admitted and found proved
28. You knew that your response as set out at paragraph 27(a) above was untrue in that you had been notified by the GMC that:
a. an investigation into your fitness to practise had been commenced by letter dated 3 August 2017; Admitted and found proved
b. an investigation had already opened and could not be reversed, by email dated 11 August 2017; Admitted and found proved
c. additional concerns raised by the Trust had been added to the investigation, by letters dated: Admitted and found proved
i. 18 August 2017; Admitted and found proved
ii. 7 November 2017. Admitted and found proved
29. You knew that your response as set out in paragraph 27(b) above was untrue in that you were present on 30 November 2017 when the Interim Order of conditions was imposed on your registration. To be determined
30. Your actions as described at paragraph:
a. 27(a) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 28; To be determined
b. 27(b) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 29. To be determined
31. By email dated 6 February 2018, you told Ms F that you 'never had any problems with previous employers', or words to that effect. Admitted and found proved
32. You knew your comment as set out in paragraph 31 above was untrue as you knew you had been subject to a formal investigation at the Trust. To be determined
33. Your action as described at paragraph 31 was dishonest by reason of paragraph 32. To be determined
34. By email dated 18 March 2018 to Ms G you:
a. supplied a copy of your revalidation details which had been amended to show:
i. the date at the top as 08/03/2018, instead of 15/03/2018; To be determined
ii. your designated body as last being updated on 08/03/2018, instead of 15/03/2018; To be determined
b. stated that 'GMC have conditions that I can't temporarily register with Private Locum agency and can't take private work, plus my contract should be longer than four weeks. There are all conditions, nothing else.' Admitted and found proved
35. You knew that the amended dates as set out at paragraph 34(a) above were untrue. To be determined
36.You knew that your statement, as set out at paragraph 34(b) above was untrue in that you were present when the IOT imposed the interim order conditions on your registration which were more onerous than you described. To be determined
37. Your actions as described at paragraph:
a. 34(a) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 35; To be determined
b. 34(b) were dishonest by reason of paragraph 36. To be determined
38. On 22 March 2018 you:
a. commenced working at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust without HR approval; To be determined
b. breached Condition 2a of your Interim Order of Conditions in that you did not notify the GMC of a post you had accepted before starting it. To be determined
And that by reason of the matters set out above your fitness to practise is impaired because of your misconduct.
The Tribunal's findings of fact
a. The Dresden Conference Programme, which was submitted by the Appellant to King's (allegation [5(c)]) but not as part of the study leave application, had been created by the Appellant and was in fact a copy of another conference programme ([6(d)]), and in submitting the Dresden Programme, he acted dishonestly ([7]).
b. When submitting an application for a post of Senior Clinical Fellow in Anaesthetics at Chelsea and Westminster the Appellant failed to declare (when asked) the interim conditions that had been imposed on him by the Interim Orders Tribunal ([27]). The Appellant knew that response was untrue ([28] and [29]) but the Tribunal did not find those actions to have been dishonest ([30]).
c. The Appellant amended his revalidation dates in order to secure a more convenient start date at Chelsea and Westminster [34]), which he knew was untrue ([35], [36]) and this was dishonest ([37(a)]).
d. He commenced work at Chelsea and Westminster without HR approval and in breach of the Interim Orders Tribunal condition that he notify the GMC of a post before starting ([38(a)] and [38(b)]).
Impairment
"33. These paragraphs of the Allegation relate to the creation of the Dresden Conference programme and its submission to the Trust [ie, King's]. The Tribunal's finding of dishonesty under paragraph 7 of the Allegation, is a clear breach of GMP [Good Medical Practice, 2013 Edition], which the Tribunal had no doubt was a serious breach of a fundamental tenet of the profession. It would be considered deplorable by members of the profession. The Tribunal determined that such actions fell so seriously short of the standards of conduct reasonably to be expected of a doctor as to amount to misconduct."
"… considered that paragraphs 68 and 71 of GMP were particularly relevant when reaching its decision. Although the Tribunal had not found any dishonesty on Dr Simawi's part in relation to these paragraphs of the Allegation, Dr Simawi had submitted an application, when under GMC investigation, to his prospective employer which was false and misrepresented his GMC status. The Tribunal earlier determined that Dr Simawi was lax and careless in reviewing the form and that his actions were far below the standards expected under GMP. The Tribunal determined this was a serious breach of GMP and amounted to misconduct."
"The Tribunal considered paragraphs 1, 65, and 71 of GMP to be of particular relevance. It has earlier found Dr Simawi to have been dishonest in relation to paragraph 37a of the Allegation. The Tribunal had no doubt that such dishonesty was a serious breach of Dr Simawi's professional obligations and would be considered deplorable by members of his profession. It was a breach of a fundamental tenet of the profession. Therefore, the Tribunal found Dr Simawi's actions to fall so seriously short of the requirements of GMP as to amount to misconduct."
"Paragraph 1 of GMP requires doctors to act with integrity and within the law. Dr Simawi was under a duty to the GMC to comply with the conditions imposed on his registration by the IOT under the provisions of the Medical Act 1983. The Tribunal has found that he failed to do so. The Tribunal determined that this failing was a serious breach of his professional obligations sufficient to constitute misconduct."
"43. Having found that the facts found proved amounted to misconduct, the Tribunal went on to consider whether Dr Simawi's fitness to practise is currently impaired. The Tribunal took into account all of the evidence it had seen and heard in the course of these proceedings.
44. Although the Tribunal was mindful that dishonesty is difficult to remediate, it noted that Dr Simawi had voluntarily participated in the Practitioner Health Programme. The Tribunal considered the extent of Dr Simawi's insight into his dishonesty. It found he had demonstrated some insight but found that it was limited. The Tribunal noted Dr Simawi's assurance that he would be more 'careful' in creating and submitting important documents. Although he gave evidence that he acknowledged his dishonesty, the Tribunal noted that Dr Simawi still characterised his actions as a mistake which looked dishonest, rather than fully acknowledging his dishonesty.
45. The Tribunal noted that Dr Simawi said he had accepted the determination of the Tribunal. Dr Simawi had been remorseful and apologised for his actions. It noted his statements about the importance of honesty, trust and integrity in doctors.
46. The Tribunal took into consideration Dr Simawi's reflective statement. It noted that the statement was signed and dated before the date of its determination on the facts. The Tribunal was of the view that Dr Simawi had clearly demonstrated that he had learned some lessons from his conduct. However, the Tribunal concluded that whilst his admissions and evidence demonstrated a level of insight, it could not be entirely satisfied that the risk of repetition had been eliminated. It remained concerned that Dr Simawi still continued to characterise his conduct as a mistake. In addition, the Tribunal considered that public confidence would be undermined if a finding of impairment were not made in a case such as this. Accordingly, it found Dr Simawi's fitness to practise currently impaired by reason of his dishonesty."
Sanction
"The most serious [lapses] involve proven dishonesty, whether or not leading to criminal proceedings and criminal penalties. In such cases the tribunal has almost invariably, no matter how strong the mitigation advanced for the solicitor, ordered that he be struck off the Roll of Solicitors ...
It is important that there should be full understanding of the reasons why the tribunal makes orders which might otherwise seem harsh. There is in some of these orders, a punitive element: a penalty may be visited on a solicitor who has fallen below the standards required of his profession in order to punish him for what he has done and to deter any other solicitor tempted to behave in the same way. Those are traditional objects of punishment. But often the order is not punitive in intention. Particularly is this so where a criminal penalty has been imposed and satisfied. The solicitor has paid his debt to society. There is no need, and it would be unjust, to punish him again. In most cases the order of the tribunal will be primarily directed to one or other or both of two other purposes. One is to be sure that the offender does not have the opportunity to repeat the offence. This purpose is achieved for a limited period by an order of suspension; plainly it is hoped that experience of suspension will make the offender meticulous in his future compliance with the required standards. The purpose is achieved for a longer period, and quite possibly indefinitely, by an order of striking off. The second purpose is the most fundamental of all: to maintain the reputation of the solicitors' profession as one in which every member, of whatever standing, may be trusted to the ends of the earth. To maintain this reputation and sustain public confidence in the integrity of the profession it is often necessary that those guilty of serious lapses are not only expelled but denied re-admission. If a member of the public sells his house, very often his largest asset, and entrusts the proceeds to his solicitor, lending re-investment in another house, he is ordinarily entitled to expect that the solicitor will be a person whose trustworthiness is not, and never has been, seriously in question. Otherwise, the whole profession, and the public as a while, is injured. A profession's most valuable asset is its collective reputation and the confidence which that inspires ..."
"92. Suspension will be an appropriate response to misconduct that is so serious that action must be taken to protect members of the public and maintain public confidence in the profession. A period of suspension will be appropriate for conduct that is serious but falls short of being fundamentally incompatible with continued registration (ie for which erasure is more likely to be the appropriate sanction because the tribunal considers that the doctor should not practise again either for public safety reasons or to protect the reputation of the profession).
93. Suspension may be appropriate, for example, where there may have been acknowledgement of fault and where the tribunal is satisfied that the behaviour or incident is unlikely to be repeated. The tribunal may wish to see evidence that the doctor has taken steps to mitigate their actions (see paragraphs 24–49).
…
97. Some or all of the following factors being present (this list is not exhaustive) would indicate suspension may be appropriate.
(a) A serious breach of Good medical practice, but where the doctor's misconduct is not fundamentally incompatible with their continued registration, therefore complete removal from the medical register would not be in the public interest. However, the breach is serious enough that any sanction lower than a suspension would not be sufficient to protect the public or maintain confidence in doctors.
…
(f) No evidence of repetition of similar behaviour since incident.
(g) The tribunal is satisfied the doctor has insight and does not pose a significant risk of repeating behaviour."
"100. The following factors will be relevant when determining the length of suspension: (a) the risk to patient safety/public protection; (b) the seriousness of the findings and any mitigating or aggravating factors; (c) ensuring the doctor has adequate time to remediate.
101. The tribunal's primary consideration should be public protection and the seriousness of the findings. Following any remediation, the time all parties may need to prepare for a review hearing if one is needed will also be a factor."
102. The table on the next page gives examples of aggravating factors that will also be relevant to the length of suspension, under broad categories, depending on the nature of the case.
Area |
Factor |
Seriousness of the findings |
• The extent to which the doctor departed from the principles of Good Medical Practice • The extent to which the doctor failed to take prompt action when patient safety, dignity or comfort was seriously compromised • Whether the doctor showed a lack of responsibility toward clinical duties/patient care • The extent to which the doctor's actions risked patient safety or public confidence • The extent of the doctor's significant or sustained acts of dishonesty or misconduct • The seriousness of the doctor's inappropriate behaviour • The extent of the doctor's predatory behaviour • The impact that the doctor's actions had on vulnerable people and the risk of harm |
Subsequent steps taken |
• Whether the doctor is reluctant to take remedial action • Whether the doctor is reluctant to apologise • The extent to which the doctor failed to address serious concerns over a period of time |
Extent to which the doctor has complied |
• The extent to which the doctor failed to comply with restrictions/requirements • Whether the doctor showed a deliberate or reckless disregard for restrictions/requirements • Whether the doctor failed to be open and honest with GMC and local investigations |
a. The doctor had acknowledged fault;b. The risk of repetition had not been eliminated but it was satisfied that there was unlikely to be a repeat;
c. The doctor did not pose a significant risk of repeating behaviour;
d. There was no evidence of similar behaviour since the incident;
e. The doctor had never sought or made financial gains from his misconduct;
f. The dishonesty had the potential to undermine public confidence in the profession ([124] of the Sanctions Guidance);
g. The doctor had failed to take reasonable steps to ensure that statements made in formal documents were accurate ([125(e)] of the Sanctions Guidance);
h. There were two instances of dishonesty but no evidence of a cover-up, and his actions were not persistent.
"38. The Tribunal determined to suspend Dr Simawi's registration from the medical register for a period of nine months. In making its decision the Tribunal had particular regard to the fact that this was dishonesty representing a grave departure from the standards of GMP. However, it was satisfied that such a period nevertheless marked the seriousness of the behaviour, reflected that there was no intent to gain financially from the conduct and was sufficient, given the circumstances of this case, to protect patients and public confidence in the profession and to maintain proper professional standards. In addition, that period would afford Dr Simawi the time and opportunity to reflect on his dishonesty sufficiently for him to be able to demonstrate his full appreciation of the gravity of his conduct."
"39. The Tribunal determined to direct a review of Dr Simawi's case. A review hearing will convene shortly before the end of the period of suspension, unless an early review is sought. The reviewing Tribunal may therefore be assisted by the following:
• Evidence of the further and full development of Dr Simawi's insight.
• Evidence from any courses and learning undertaken in relation to the issue of probity.
• Evidence that Dr Simawi has maintained his relevant skills and knowledge.
• Any other evidence that Dr Simawi may consider useful for the Tribunal."
The statutory framework
Medical Act 1983
"(2) Where the Medical Practitioners Tribunal find that the person's fitness to practise is impaired they may, if they think fit -
(a) except in a health case or language case, direct that the person's name shall be erased from the register;
(b) direct that his registration in the register shall be suspended (that is to say, shall not have effect) during such period not exceeding twelve months as may be specified in the direction; or
(c) direct that his registration shall be conditional on his compliance, during such period not exceeding three years as may be specified in the direction, with such requirements so specified as the Tribunal think fit to impose for the protection of members of the public or in his interests."
"(4) Where a Medical Practitioners Tribunal have given a direction that a person's registration be suspended -
(a) under subsection (2) above;
(b) under subsection (10) or (12) below; or
(c) under paragraph 5A(3D) or 5C(4) of Schedule 4 to this Act,
subsections (4A) and (4B) below apply."
"The Tribunal may direct that the direction is to be reviewed by another Medical Practitioners Tribunal prior to the expiry of the period of suspension; and, where the Tribunal do so direct, the MPTS must arrange for the direction to be reviewed by another Medical Practitioners Tribunal prior to that expiry."
"(1) The following decisions are appealable decisions for the purposes of this section, that is to say -
(a) a decision of a Medical Practitioners Tribunal under section 35D above giving a direction for erasure, for suspension or for conditional registration or varying the conditions imposed by a direction for conditional registration;
(b) a decision of a Medical Practitioners Tribunal under section 41(9) below giving a direction that the right to make further applications under that section shall be suspended indefinitely."
"(4) A person in respect of whom an appealable decision falling within subsection (1) has been taken may, before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the date on which notification of the decision was served under section 35E(1) above, or section 41(10) ... below, appeal against the decision to the relevant court."
"(7) On an appeal under this section from a Medical Practitioners Tribunal, the court may—
(a) dismiss the appeal;
(b) allow the appeal and quash the direction or variation appealed against;
(c) substitute for the direction or variation appealed against any other direction or variation which could have been given or made by a Medical Practitioners Tribunal; or
(d) remit the case to the MPTS for them to arrange for a Medical Practitioners Tribunal to dispose of the case in accordance with the directions of the court,
and may make such order as to costs (or, in Scotland, expenses) as it thinks fit."
Appeals under s 40 of the Medical Act 1983: principles
a. The Tribunal's decision is correct unless and until the contrary is shown: Siddiqui v General Medical Council [2015] EWHC 1966 (Admin), per Hickinbottom J, citing Laws LJ in Subesh v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2004] EWCA Civ 56 at [44];b. The court must have in mind and must give such weight as appropriate in that the Tribunal is a specialist one whose understanding of what the medical profession expects of its members in matters of medical practice deserves respect: Gosalakkal v General Medical Council [2015] EWHC 2445 (Admin);
c. The Tribunal has the benefit of hearing and seeing the witnesses on both sides, which the appeal court does not;
d. The questions of primary and secondary facts and the over-all value judgment made by the Panel, especially the last, are akin to jury questions to which there may reasonably be different answers: Meadows v General Medical Council […] [197], per Auld LJ;
e. The test for deciding whether a finding of fact is against the evidence is whether that finding exceeds the generous ambit within which reasonable disagreement about the conclusions to be drawn from the evidence is possible: Assucurazioni General SpA v Arab Insurance Group [2003] 1 WLR 577, [197], per Ward LJ.
f. Findings of primary fact, particularly founded upon an assessment of the credibility of witnesses, will be virtually unassailable: Southall v General Medical Council [2010] EWCA Civ 407 , [47] per Leveson LJ with whom Waller and Dyson LJJ agreed.
g. If the court is asked to draw an inference, or question any secondary finding of fact, it will give significant deference to the decision of the Panel, and will only find it to be wrong if there are objective grounds for that conclusion: Siddiqui, supra, [30(iii)].
h. Reasons in straightforward cases will generally be sufficient in setting out the facts to be proved and finding them proved or not; with exceptional cases, while a lengthy judgment is not required, the reasons will need to contain a few sentences dealing with the salient issues: Southall v General Medical Council [2010] EWCA Civ 407, [55]-[56].
i. A principal purpose of the Panel's jurisdiction in relation to sanctions is the preservation and maintenance of public confidence in the medical profession so particular force is given to the need to accord special respect to its judgment: Fatnani and Raschid v General Medical Council [2007] EWCA Civ 46, [19], per Laws LJ.
j. An expert Tribunal is afforded a wide margin of discretion and the court will only interfere where the decision of the Tribunal is wrong: see R(Fatnani) v General Medical Council [2007] EWCA Civ 46."
"[44] There are, of course, numerous authorities emphasising the public interest in maintaining the standards and reputations in the professions. The importance of honesty to the health and care professions is underlined by the fact that striking off may be an appropriate sanction under the indicative sanctions guidance. It will often be proper, even in cases of one-off dishonestly (see Nicholas-Pillai v GMC [2009] EWHC 1048 (Admin) at paragraph 27). It has been said that where dishonest conduct is combined with a lack of insight, is persistent, or is covered up, nothing short of striking off is likely to be appropriate (see Naheed v GMC [2011] EWHC 702 (Admin)). It is pertinent to note that in Naheed (supra) a bogus CV was submitted by cutting and pasting from a colleague's career history. At paragraph 21 Parker J said this:
'Dishonesty acts which compromise the integrity of job applications are acts which undermine something fundamental to the system of medicine. In my view that submission is supported by Macey v GMC [2009] EWHC 3180 (Admin) at paragraphs 43 to 44 by Irwin J.'"
"6. The decisions from this court have demonstrated that a very strict line has been taken in relation to findings of dishonesty. This court and its predecessor, the Privy Council, has repeatedly recognised that for all professional men and women, a finding of dishonesty lies at the top end of the spectrum of gravity of misconduct; see Tait v Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons [2003] UKPC 34 at paragraph 13.
7. Dishonesty will be particularly serious where it occurs in the performance by a doctor of his or her duties and/or involves a breach of trust placed in the doctor by the community. Both elements are serious and aggravating features and both are present in a case of dishonestly using prescription forms to obtain drugs. See R (Rogers) v GMC [2004] EWHC 424 (Admin) per Mitting J at [28–30].
8. In cases of proven dishonesty, the balance can be expected to fall down on the side of maintaining public confidence in the profession by a severe sanction against the doctor concerned. See Nicholas-Pillai v GMC [2009] EWHC 1048 (Admin) per Mitting J at [27] where he stated:
"That sanction will often and perfectly properly be the sanction of erasure, even in the case of a one-off instance of dishonesty."
9. Where proven dishonesty is combined with a lack of insight (or is covered up) the authorities show that nothing short of erasure is likely to be appropriate. As Sullivan J put it in R (Farah) v GMC [2008] EWHC 731 (Admin), a case which involved the theft and forgery of prescription forms in order to obtain drugs, at paragraph 21:
'… given the nature of the appellant's dishonesty and given the Panel's finding that there had been a persistent lack of insight into that dishonesty, whatever the mitigating factors were, the inevitable consequence was that erasure from the register was an entirely proportionate response to the appellant's conduct. The Panel was entitled to come to the view that where a doctor had engaged in deliberate dishonesty and abused his position as a doctor and then had shown a persistent lack of insight into that conduct, he simply could not continue to practise in the medical profession. Thus, the Panel's conclusion as to sanction was in practical terms inevitable once it had reached the conclusion it did about the appellant's lack of insight into his dishonest conduct. For these reasons, this appeal must be dismissed.'"
"35. The starting point is that dishonesty by a doctor is almost always extremely serious. There are numerous cases which emphasise the importance of honesty and integrity in the medical profession, and they establish a number of general principles. Findings of dishonesty lie at the top end of the spectrum of gravity of misconduct: Theodoropolous¸ supra, [35]. Where dishonest conduct is combined with a lack of insight, is persistent, or is covered up, nothing short of erasure is likely to be appropriate: Naheed v General Medical Council [2011] EWHC 702 (Admin), [22]. The sanction of erasure will often be proper even in cases of one-off dishonesty: Nicholas-Pillai, supra, [27]. The misconduct does not have to occur in a clinical setting before it renders erasure, rather than suspension, the appropriate sanction: Theodoropolous, supra, [35]. Misconduct involving personal integrity that impacts on the reputation of the profession is harder to remediate than poor clinical performance: Yeong v General Medical Council [2009] EWHC 1923, [50]; General Medical Council v Patel [2018] EWHC 171 (Admin) at [64]; In such cases, personal mitigation should be given limited weight, as the reputation of the profession is more important than the fortunes of an individual member: Bolton v Law Society [1994] 1 WLR 512 at 519; General Medical Council v Stone [2017] EWHC 2534 (Admin) at [34], supra, [47]."
"…
(v) In regulatory proceedings the appellate court will not have the professional expertise of the Tribunal of fact. As a consequence, the appellate court will approach Tribunal determinations about whether conduct is serious misconduct or impairs a person's fitness to practise, and what is necessary to maintain public confidence and proper standards in the profession and sanctions, with diffidence: see Fatnani at paragraph 16 [Fatnani and Raschid v General Medical Council [2007] EWCA Civ 46; [2007] 1 WLR 1460; ; and Khan v General Pharmaceutical Council [2016] UKSC 64; [2017] 1 WLR 169, at paragraph 36.
(vi) However there may be matters, such as dishonesty or sexual misconduct, where the court "is likely to feel that it can assess what is needed to protect the public or maintain the reputation of the profession more easily for itself and thus attach less weight to the expertise of the Tribunal …": see Council for the Regulation of Healthcare Professionals v GMC and Southall [2005] EWHC 579 (Admin); [2005] Lloyd's Rep Med 365 at paragraph 11, and Khan at paragraph 36(c). As Lord Millett observed in Ghosh v GMC [2001] UKPC 29; [2001] 1 WLR 1915 and 1923G, the appellate court 'will afford an appropriate measure of respect of the judgment in the committee … but the [appellate court] will not defer to the committee's judgment more than is warranted by the circumstances'".
The parties' submissions
The Appellant's case
The Respondent's case
Discussion
The length of the suspension period
"In addition, that period would afford Dr Simawi the time and opportunity to reflect on his dishonesty sufficiently for him to be able to demonstrate his full appreciation of the gravity of his conduct."
"44. … The Tribunal considered the extent of Dr Simawi's insight into his dishonesty. It found he had demonstrated some insight but found that it was limited."
Is a direction made by a Tribunal under s 35D(4A) of the MA 1983 for a review of a direction that a person's registration be suspended (imposed under s 35D(2)(b)) itself an appealable decision under s 40(1) ?
"4 Where a Medical Practitioners Tribunal have given a direction that a person's registration be suspended –
(a) under subsection (2) above;
…
(4A) The Tribunal may direct that the direction is to be reviewed by another Medical Practitioners Tribunal …"