Thursday, November 25, 2010 - 12:30pm to Friday, November 26, 2010 - 1:55pm
Location: 
FLA

The Health Law Ethics & Policy Workshop Series
 
presents
 
Lara Khoury

Faculty of Law, McGill University

 

Healthcare-Associated Infections, Modern Medicine and the Changing Paradigms of Negligence

 

 

Thursday, November 25, 2010

12:30 – 2:00
Faculty of Law, University of Toronto

78 Queen’s Park, Flavelle House

Classroom A

Toronto, Ontario, M5S 2C5

 

 

 Everyone is welcome to attend, no registration is required.

 

 

ABSTRACT

Injuries arising as a result of medical innovation force us to question fundamental assumptions made about private law and, in particular, civil responsibility as we have traditionally envisaged it in the Western world. Challenges to our basic principles of civil liability(1) are becoming particularly obvious in the context of litigation by victims of healthcare-associated infections. Although these infections are hardly new occurrences in our healthcare system, they are growing in importance due to unique, modern factors such as the overpopulation of hospitals, antibiotic prescription patterns, increasingly complex and invasive medical procedures, and an aging population, to name just a few. Causation and the concept of negligence, as justificatory bases for shifting the burden of loss away from the injured party, are two paradigms that must be rethought in this context. This reassessment also leads us to question a more general assumption, namely our focus on individual responsibility based on blameworthy behaviour. On a functional level, we must also question whether the law of civil liability can - where medical accidents are concerned - still efficiently attains its main objectives: compensating victims for loss, holding parties accountable for their wrongful behaviour, and ensuring accidents are prevented in the future.

[1] This talk will be based on both Canadian common law and Quebec civil law. Therefore, the term “civil liability” will be used to refer to tort law and the law of responsabilité civile.

BIOGRAPHY

Professor Lara Khoury is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law of McGill University where she has been teaching since 2002. She holds a LL.B. from the University of Sherbrooke. She also completed a doctoral (D.Phil) degree at the University of Oxford, from where she also holds a master's degree (B.C.L.). She teaches and conducts research in the fields of comparative/transsystemic extra-contractual obligations, medical negligence and health law. She is the author of Uncertain Causation in Medical Liability (Prix Minerve 2004; Quebec Bar Foundation Prize 2008). In recent years, her research has focused on legal issues related to healthcare-associated infections, as well as on the impact of biomedical innovations on the transformation of civil liability principles. 

A light lunch will be served.

 

For further information or to access the seminar series schedule go to:  www.law.utoronto.ca/visitors_content.asp?itemPath=5/7/0/0/0&contentId=211

or email Melissa at m.casco@utoronto.ca