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Home > News > India News > Article > SC orders AMRI hospital to pay Rs 596 cr in medical negligence case

SC orders AMRI hospital to pay Rs 5.96 cr in medical negligence case

Updated on: 24 October,2013 01:42 PM IST  | 
PTI |

The Supreme Court today awarded a whopping Rs 5.96 crore as compensation to be paid by Kolkata- based AMRI Hospital and three doctors to a US-based Indian- origin doctor Kunal Saha for medical negligence which led to the death of his wife in 1998

SC orders AMRI hospital to pay Rs 5.96 cr in medical negligence case

A bench of justices S J Mukhopadhaya and V Gopala Gowda asked the hospital and the three doctors to pay the amount within eight weeks to Kunal Saha, an Ohio-based AIDS researcher.


The National Consumer Dispute Redressal Commission (NCDRC) in 2011 had awarded Rs 1.73 crore to the doctor whose wife Anuradha Saha died in 1998 following faulty treatment administered at the hospital.


Raising the amount of compensation, the apex court also asked the hospital to pay an interest at the rate of six per cent to Saha.


The court said out of the total compensation amount, Dr. Balram Prasad and Dr Sukumar Mukherjee will pay Rs 10 lakh each and Dr Baidyanath Halder will have to pay Rs five lakh to Saha within eight weeks.

The rest of the amount, along with the interest, will be paid by the hospital, the apex court said, adding that a compliance report be filed before it after payment of the compensation amount.

NCDRC had fixed the compensation on a direction by the apex court, which had referred Saha's appeal to it while holding the three doctors and the hospital culpable to civil liability for medical negligence which had led to the death of Anuradha.

Anuradha, herself a child psychologist, had come to her home town Kolkata in March 1998 on a summer vacation.

She complained of skin rashes on April 25 and consulted Dr. Sukumar Mukherjee, who, without prescribing any medicine, simply asked her to take rest.

As rashes reappeared more aggressively on May 7, 1998, Dr. Mukherjee prescribed Depomedrol injection 80 mg twice daily, a step which was later faulted by experts at the apex court.

After administration of the injection, Anuradha's condition deteriorated rapidly following which she had to be admitted at AMRI on May 11 under Dr. Mukherjee's supervision. She later died in AMRI on May 28, 1998.

Her husband filed a criminal as well as civil case against the doctors and both the hospitals on the ground that they were grossly negligent in her treatment leading to her death.

In 2009, though the apex court absolved the doctors and the hospitals of criminal liability for medical negligence, it had held them culpable of civil liabilities and referred Saha's plea for compensation under provisions of the Consumer Protection Act to NCDRC, which, had in 2006 dismissed, the case.

After the NCDRC judgement, Saha had again moved the apex court and the three doctors had also filed an appeal before it.

NCDRC, in its judgement, had stipulated that AMRI and Dr. Mukherjee would pay Rs 40.4 lakh each to Saha, while two other doctors, Halder and Prasad, would pay Rs 26.93 lakh each to him.

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