Hospital facing legal action for rejecting acid-attack victim

Hospital facing legal action for rejecting acid-attack victim

The Tarawan family waits at the Public Health Ministry on Nov 12 to file their petition against Praram 2 Hospital, complaining that their daughter Chorlada was denied treatment and died shortly afterwards.(File photo)
The Tarawan family waits at the Public Health Ministry on Nov 12 to file their petition against Praram 2 Hospital, complaining that their daughter Chorlada was denied treatment and died shortly afterwards.(File photo)

Praram 2 Hospital in Bangkok will face multiple legal action for rejecting a woman who had been attacked with acid and who died shortly after being sent away, the Health Service Support Department announced on Tuesday.

Director-general Nathawut Prasertsiripong said the management of the private hospital failed to have a doctor on duty around-the-clock to provide emergency service. Other staff were, instead, in charge.

The offence carried a maximum prison term of two years and/or a fine of 40,000 baht.

Dr Nathawut said the hospital management also failed to make out a report on the injured woman,  issue a letter referring the patient to another hospital, and to provide the patient with appropriate transport.

That made the management liable to a maximum prison term of one year and/or a fine of  20,000 baht.

The management of Praram 2 Hospital also failed to act in a professional manner to treat a patient whose life was in danger, which carried a maximum penalty of two years in prison and/or a fine of 40,000 baht.

These offences were under the law governing hospitals.

If the management of the hospital failed to correct these issues within 15 days it would risk losing its operating licence, Dr Nathawut said.

The Health Service Support Department was responding to a complaint brought by law activist Atchariya Ruengratanapong and the family of Chorlada Tarawan, 38, who had acid poured over her face and into her mouth by her jealous new husband in Bangkok on Nov 10.

Mr Atchariya said there was no doctor on duty at the hospital when Ms Chorlada needed emergency treatment.

Her 12-year-old daughter rushed her by taxi to Praram 2 Hospital, where a nurse gave them 40 baht to catch another taxi to another hospital where she was covered by government health insurance. She died in severe pain shortly afterwards.

Dr Nathawut said the finding was made by the department's complaints sub-committee comprising experts from organisations in the government and the private sectors, including the Office of the Consumer Protection Board, the Office of the Attorney-General and the Private Hospitals Association.

The decision was based on medical documents, security camera footage and testimony of hospital staff.

The department also found that Praram 2 Hospital illegally converted its parking lot into an outpatients unit. This building had already been closed, Dr Nathawut said.


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