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HART AND HONORE ON CAUSATION IN THE LAW: IMPLICATIONS FOR MEDICAL NEGLIGENCE
This paper on “Hart and Honore on Causation
in Law: Implications for Medical Negligence”, ascertains the extent proofs of
medical negligence adduce to the demand of justice. With the qualitative method
of research, the paper analyzes the idea of causation in law as expressed by
Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart and Tony Honore in their book, Causation in the
Law, and also examines proofs of negligence available in medical practice, such
as resp ipsa loquitur and contributory negligence, which adduce to the sin qua
non test and the NESS test. It is deduced that for Hart and Honore, attribution
of responsibility in law goes beyond proving the fact of the case to imply a
metaphysical element, the intent behind the conduct for which responsibility or
culpability is attributed, or mens rea. Hence they refute the minimalist
position that the sine qua non test and the NESS test are sufficient for
proving causation in law. Their argument is that these tests, premised on the
distinction between proximate and remote causes, limit investigation into the
chain of causation such that only those causes, probably, observable ones, are
taken into cognizance in attribution of responsibility. This limitation, which,
they argue springs from the difficulty in exhaustively investigating of all
possible factors in the chain of causation, could impede providing sufficient
account of cause in law. One of the implications of their position for medical
negligence is that, limiting proof of negligence proximate causes, amounts to
only arbitrary proof of negligence, which is inimical to the demand of justice.
Another implication is that proofs of medical negligence could be improved if
factors regarded as remote causes, which may include beliefs, are equally recognized
in attribution of responsibility. Therefore, this paper recommends that law and
medical practice should keep evolving measures that will make it feasible to
examine all possible factors that could be causes to any event of negligence,
for justice to be achieved.
KEYWORD: Hart, Honore, Causation, Law,
Implications, Medical Negligence
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