-
-
-
-
-
- About extra-mural studies (EMS)
- EMS requirements
- Information for vet students
- Information for EMS providers
- Information for vet schools
- Temporary EMS requirements
- Practice by students - regulations
- Health and safety on EMS placements
- EMS contacts and further guidance
- Extra-mural studies fit for the future
-
-
- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Surgeons
- Code of Professional Conduct for Veterinary Nurses
- Contact the Advice Team
- XL Bully dog ban
- 'Under care' - new guidance
- Advice on Schedule 3
- Controlled Drugs Guidance – A to Z
- Dealing with Difficult Situations webinar recordings
- FAQs – Common medicines pitfalls
- FAQs – Routine veterinary practice and clinical veterinary research
- FAQs – Advertising of practice names
- GDPR – RCVS information and Q&As
Merseyside veterinary surgeon struck off for inadequate clinical care
30 July 2008
Please note
This is an archived news story. Mr Leslie Higgott was removed from the RCVS Register of Members on 02 September 2008 and is therefore not currently entitled to practise as a veterinary surgeon in the UK.
The Disciplinary Committee of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) has found Mr Leslie Higgott guilty of Disgraceful Conduct in a Professional Respect and has directed that his name be removed from the Register of Veterinary Surgeons.
Today’s hearing concluded a case that started on 29 April and adjourned on 2 May 2008.
At the previous hearing, the Committee had heard a number of charges regarding Mr Higgott’s in-patient treatment of a Springer Spaniel, Fliss, in June 2007: namely, that he had not carried out any or sufficient investigative procedures; had not sought any additional veterinary opinion; and, did not sufficiently observe or monitor the animal. Further, that he did not provide an adequately-sized and clean cage/box for the dog’s hospitalisation, and that by his remarks and behaviour, he had failed to treat his client with respect, courtesy and consideration.
The facts of all of these charges were denied by Mr Higgott, although he admitted that, despite advice from the College, he had failed to keep up to date with continuing professional development (CPD) and had kept no clinical notes for animals he had treated between April 2006 and August 2007.
The Committee heard that the dog, displaying symptoms of depression and vomiting, was diagnosed by Mr Higgott firstly as having gastritis, then a liver problem, and finally as having a kidney problem. When symptoms persisted, the owner returned the dog to Mr Higgott where it remained hospitalised for a period of 11 days, until it was found dead by the owner. A subsequent post-mortem examination revealed that the dog had suffered from a heart tumour.
The Committee heard that during the period of hospitalisation, the dog was kept in a travelling box and that the owner, who visited almost daily, repeatedly complained to Mr Higgott about the conditions in which the dog was being kept, with vomit, faeces and urine on the floor of the box. The owner told the Committee that Mr Higgott had dismissed these concerns. Mr Higgott also maintained it was an unfortunate coincidence that the owner had visited at times when the dog was dirty. The Committee also heard that the owner, on several occasions, asked Mr Higgott if blood tests or x-rays would be useful, but was told that these were not necessary as the dog was responding to treatment.
RCVS representatives had visited Mr Higgott’s practice on several occasions between 2005 and 2007. They reported at the first hearing that, despite a move to new premises, inadequate standards of hygiene and cleanliness persisted at Mr Higgott’s practice and that, regardless of advice, Mr Higgott had failed to maintain clinical records or to undertake any CPD. During one visit, they pointed out the travelling box in which Mr Higgott had kept the Spaniel; the Committee heard veterinary evidence that while this might have been suitable for 24 hours, it was wholly inadequate for longer periods of hospitalisation.
In April, the Committee had found the facts alleged to be proved. At the resumed hearing (28-29 July), the Committee gave anxious consideration to letters and oral evidence provided in support of Mr Higgott, and took account of the fact that there had been undoubted improvements in hygiene in the practice in recent times. However, it was concerned by the fact that Mr Higgott had undertaken only minimal CPD since April 2008 and that his treatment of Fliss was so inadequate that he would require very considerable training over a substantial period of time before he could begin to attain the standards of diagnosis and treatment properly to be expected of a competent veterinary surgeon, and that it was unlikely that he would undertake such training.
The Committee decided that Mr Higgott’s activities amounted to Disgraceful Conduct in a Professional Respect and agreed that the Sanction should be the most severe that the Committee can make – removal from the Register. This renders Mr Higgott unable to practise as a veterinary surgeon in the UK. Mrs Alison Bruce, chairing the Disciplinary Committee, said: “[the Committee] could not envisage how any period of training or supervision during any period of postponement would bring about that change in attitude in the Respondent which would be necessary before the Committee or the public could repose confidence in the belief that there would be no repetition of this lack of respect for, or feeling for, the suffering of an animal in his care.”
ENDS
For more information please contact:
Lizzie Lockett, Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
020 7202 0725 / [email protected]
NOTES FOR EDITORS
1. The RCVS is the regulatory body for veterinary surgeons in the UK and deals with issues of professional misconduct, maintaining the register of veterinary surgeons eligible to practise in the UK and assuring standards of veterinary education.
2. RCVS disciplinary powers are exercised through the Preliminary Investigation and Disciplinary Committees, established in accordance with Schedule 2 to the Veterinary Surgeons Act 1966 (the 1966 Act). The RCVS has authority to deal with three types of case:
a) Fraudulent registration
b) Criminal convictions
c) Allegations of disgraceful professional conduct
3. The Disciplinary Committee is a constituted judicial tribunal under the 1966 Act and follows rules of evidence similar to those used in a court of law.
4. The burden of proving an allegation falls upon the RCVS, and the RCVS must prove to the standard that the Committee is sure.
5. Further information, including the charges against Mr Higgott and the Committee’s findings and judgment, can be found via www.rcvs.org.uk/disciplinary.