20 years after routine dialysis led to patient death, NCDRC slashes Apollo Hospital’s payout

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Consumer forum news: A routine dialysis session in December 2006 that spiralled into a young patient’s death has culminated in a nuanced ruling by the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC), while reducing the compensation against Indraprastha Apollo Hospital from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 5 lakh.A bench of Justice Sudip Ahluwalia (presiding member) and Dr Sadhna Shanker (member) was hearing a revision petition filed by the hospital against the Delhi State Commission’s 2019 order enhancing compensation. Justice Sudip Ahluwalia (NCDRC presiding member) and Dr Sadhna Shanker (member) examined whether the steep increase in damages was legally sustainable.“The approach of the learned State Commission in enhancing the amount of compensation 10 times from that awarded by the learned District Forum would ex facie appear to be punitive as well as excessive in nature. At the same time, the compensation awarded by the learned District Forum to the tune of Rs 1.00 lakh only on account of the physical and mental harassment of the Complainant would also appear to be meagre,” said the commission on April 17.Also Read | Apex consumer body orders Kolkata nephrologist to pay Rs 5 lakh after delay cost dialysis patient her lifeWhy compensation was reworkedThe consumer commission examined whether the steep increase in damages was legally sustainable in the absence of proven negligence.Observing the limits of liability in medical cases, the commission noted that while “some negligence may have been committed by the technician or staff,” there was no proof that the patient’s death “was caused due to negligence of the doctors”, especially given her critical renal condition and prolonged ICU treatment.The national commission found the state consumer commission’s tenfold jump in compensation to be “punitive and excessive”, particularly in the absence of a clear finding of medical negligence. At the same time, considering the trauma suffered by the family, the national consumer commission awarded them Rs 5 lakh as lump sum compensation, 6 per cent annual interest from the date of the district consumer forum’s order and Rs 40,000 towards litigation costs.From dialysis room to ICU: 2006 incidentThe case dates back to December 23, 2006, when the complainant’s daughter, suffering from end-stage renal disease was undergoing dialysis at Indraprastha Apollo Hospital. It was alleged that a dialysis instrument had not been properly washed before use.Story continues below this adAlso Read | 19 years after Rs 19 lakh vanished from ATM, apex consumer body slashes 25 per cent insurance payoutDespite objections raised at the time, the procedure was allegedly continued. Shortly thereafter, the patient developed breathlessness, collapsed, and slipped into a coma. She remained in the ICU for 47 days before dying on February 8, 2007.Long legal journeyThe dispute first reached the district consumer forum, which awarded around Rs 1 lakh as compensation, noting no negligence by doctors but indicating minor lapses by hospital staff.In July 2019, the Delhi State Commission enhanced this compensation to Rs 10 lakh, treating the deficiency as more serious. This prompted the hospital to approach the national consumer commission, arguing that the enhancement was arbitrary and unsupported by evidence.Medical evidence: Multiple possible causesA crucial factor in the case was the expert opinion of a Safdarjung Hospital medical board (December 4, 2010), which outlined several possible causes for the patient’s sudden deterioration, including cardiac complications, pulmonary embolism and anaphylactic reaction linked to dialysis.Story continues below this adAlso Read | A black umbrella sent him to death row for rape, murder; 9 years on, Supreme Court sets him freeHowever, the report stopped short of conclusively attributing the death to any one factor, noting that immediate resuscitative steps had been taken by the hospital.The national consumer commission emphasised that given the patient’s advanced kidney disease and critical state, it could not be definitively concluded that the dialysis-related lapse caused her death.Distinguishing negligence from deficiencyThe ruling draws a clear line between medical negligence (requiring proof of fault by doctors), and deficiency in service (such as lapses by staff or technicians).While the latter may warrant compensation, the national consumer commission underscored that higher damages must be grounded in proven medical negligence, not merely adverse outcomes or suspicion.Story continues below this adWith directions to the hospital to pay the revised amount within two months, failing which higher interest will apply the case finally closes a 20-year legal chapter rooted in a tragic medical episode.The verdict serves as a reminder of both the complexity of fixing liability in medical cases and the importance of evidence-based adjudication in consumer disputes.