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RTI for Medical Negligence Enquiry

Medical negligence — RTI for enquiry and action — RTI Wiki

Ramesh's mother went into a small hospital for a routine gallbladder surgery. She came out in a coma, and died four days later. The family was given no clear answer. The discharge summary hinted at a complication, but nobody explained what went wrong. Ramesh filed a written complaint with the State Medical Council, the body that licences and disciplines doctors in his state. He waited six months. No reply. He called, he visited, he wrote again. Silence. He had a right to know what the Council did with his complaint — but the Council would not tell him on its own. This is where the Right to Information Act becomes the common man's lever: it forces a silent public authority to put its file on the table.

This guide shows, step by step, how a citizen can use RTI to drag a stuck medical-negligence complaint out of a State Medical Council, which questions to ask, which fee to pay, and how to climb the appeal ladder when the Council still stays quiet.

Direct answer. File one RTI to the State Medical Council and one to the Chief Medical Officer of the district hospital. Ask for the complaint registration number, the enquiry committee, the deposition records, the action taken, and the appeal status. The Council is a public authority under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act 2005 — the Bombay High Court confirmed this in Bombay HC — Medical Council is a public authority under RTI.

Who governs doctors today

The medical regulator you deal with today is the National Medical Commission, set up under the National Medical Commission Act, 2019 (Act No. 30 of 2019). This Act repealed the old Indian Medical Council Act, 1956 and dissolved the Medical Council of India; the IMC Act 1956 stopped operating on 25 September 2020 when the NMC Act came fully into force. So if you see an old document that talks about the Medical Council of India or the IMC Act, treat it as history — the live law is the NMC Act 2019.

Under the NMC structure, day-to-day complaints against a doctor are filed with the State Medical Council first. The Ethics and Medical Registration Board (EMRB) is the autonomous board within the NMC that regulates professional conduct and hears appeals against State Medical Council orders. The NMC also runs an online complaints portal at NMC Complaints Portal covering ethics, ragging and grievances.

The link between medical negligence and consumer law comes from Indian Medical Association v. V.P. Shantha, (1995) 6 SCC 651 — the Supreme Court held that medical services are a service under the Consumer Protection Act, so a patient can also approach the Consumer Forum. The civil-vs-criminal line for doctors was drawn in Jacob Mathew v. State of Punjab, (2005) 6 SCC 1: a doctor faces criminal prosecution under Section 304A only for gross negligence, and a prosecution needs a credible expert opinion. For a deeper look at the criminal route, see Medical negligence — when a doctor faces a criminal case.

The complaint ladder, before you file RTI

RTI works best when you already have a complaint on record and a number to quote. The complaint ladder, built from the NMC Registered Medical Practitioner (Professional Conduct) Regulations, 2022, is:

  1. Step 1 — File with the State Medical Council. Under Section 39, a complaint of professional misconduct is filed with the State Medical Council, ordinarily within 2 years of the cause of action. You must submit five copies with supporting documents.
  2. Step 2 — Reply period. Under Section 40, the doctor (respondent) gets 15 working days to reply.
  3. Step 3 — Outcome. Under Section 41, the Council can dismiss the complaint, issue a reprimand, order counseling, suspend the licence, impose a monetary penalty, or permanently remove the doctor from the National Medical Register.
  4. Step 4 — Appeal. Under Section 45, the doctor may appeal to the EMRB within 60 days of the Council order, and then to the NMC within 60 days of the EMRB order.

As a complainant, you are normally not the one appealing, but you have a right to know whether an appeal has been filed and where it stands. That is exactly what RTI extracts.

Time-barred? If your complaint is older than 2 years, the Council may refuse to hear it on limitation. Ask in your RTI whether the complaint was held time-barred and on what date.

What RTI gives you that the Council will not

A State Medical Council rarely writes back to the complainant on its own. It will register the complaint, form an enquiry committee, take depositions, pass an order, and then wait for the doctor to appeal. The complainant is left in the dark. RTI turns the lights on. With one application you can force the Council to disclose:

  1. whether your complaint was registered and given a number,
  2. who sat on the enquiry committee and on what dates it met,
  3. the depositions and documents the committee recorded,
  4. the final order and the action taken on the doctor,
  5. whether an appeal was filed to the EMRB or NMC and its status.

This is proof. Once you hold the Council's replies, you can carry them to the Consumer Forum, to the police for a criminal complaint, or to the High Court in a writ if the Council has done nothing.

Step-by-step: how to file the RTI

Step 1 — Identify the public authority. Your two targets are the State Medical Council (which heard the ethics complaint) and the Chief Medical Officer of the district hospital (who holds the hospital's internal inquiry file). Both are public authorities under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act 2005.

Step 2 — Draft the application under Section 6(1). Section 6(1) of the RTI Act 2005 is the correct provision: a person who wants information must make a request in writing to the Public Information Officer. Keep one application to one authority — do not mix the Council and the CMO in a single letter.

Step 3 — Pay the right fee. This is where the old article misled people. The flat Rs.10 fee comes from the Right to Information Rules, 2012 (Rule 3, G.S.R. 603(E) dated 31 July 2012), and it applies to CENTRAL public authorities. State Medical Councils are STATE public authorities, so the fee follows each state's own RTI rules. For example, the Kerala State Medical Council charges Rs.10; some states charge Rs.20 or a different amount. Check your State Medical Council's website or the state's RTI rules before you attach the fee. BPL applicants are exempt in every case.

Step 4 — Submit. Hand it over the counter and take a receiving stamp, or send it by registered post with the receipt kept safe. The Council must reply within 30 days.

Step 5 — First appeal if the reply is missing or evasive. If 30 days pass with no reply, or the reply is incomplete, file a First Appeal with the First Appellate Authority named in the Council's RTI manual. Every public authority must designate a PIO and a First Appellate Authority — the Bombay High Court confirmed this for medical councils.

Step 6 — Second appeal to the Information Commission. If the First Appeal also fails, file a Second Appeal to the State Information Commission. From there, a citizen can move the High Court in a writ if the Commission is slow.

The RTI template

To: The Public Information Officer,
[State Medical Council name and address]

Subject: Application under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act, 2005 —
        Status of medical negligence complaint No. [your complaint no.],
        dated [date], concerning Dr. [name], [hospital].

1. Please furnish the complaint registration number and date.
2. Please state whether an enquiry committee was constituted,
   give the names of its members, and the dates of its sittings.
3. Please provide copies of the depositions and documents
   placed before the enquiry committee.
4. Please state the final order passed and the action taken
   on the doctor (reprimand, suspension, penalty, removal, or dismissal).
5. Please state whether any appeal has been filed to the EMRB or NMC,
   and the present status of that appeal.

Fee: Rs.[amount as per your state's RTI rules] by [IPO/cash/Indian Postal Order].

Applicant: [name], [address], [phone].

Use a second copy, retitled for the Chief Medical Officer, to ask the hospital side: whether an internal inquiry was ordered, who conducted it, what findings were recorded, and what action was taken against the staff concerned.

Common mistakes

  1. Filing only at the hospital. The hospital's internal inquiry is not the disciplinary record. The State Medical Council holds the licence-and-discipline file. File both.
  2. Quoting the IMC Act 1956 as the governing law. That Act is repealed. Quote the NMC Act 2019 and the NMC RMP Professional Conduct Regulations 2022.
  3. Pasting a flat Rs.10 fee. That is correct only for central public authorities. State Medical Councils follow the state RTI rules — verify the amount first.
  4. Missing the 2-year window. Under Section 39 of the 2022 Regulations, the ethics complaint is ordinarily filed within 2 years. If you let time slip, the Council can refuse the complaint itself, and RTI can only tell you it was time-barred.
  5. Forgetting the NMC parallel. The NMC complaints portal at nmc.org.in/complaints lets you track ethics complaints online. Cross-check the portal against what the Council told you in its RTI reply.

Pairing RTI with the consumer and criminal routes

RTI is a fact-finding tool, not the remedy itself. The remedy sits in three parallel lanes:

  1. Consumer Forum. Because of Product liability and the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and the V.P. Shantha ruling, you can claim compensation for medical negligence in the Consumer Forum. The RTI reply from the Council becomes your evidence.
  2. Criminal case. For gross negligence, a police complaint under Section 304A IPC (now Section 106 BNS) is possible, but Jacob Mathew requires a credible expert opinion first. See the criminal-route guide.
  3. Survival after the doctor's death. If the doctor dies during the dispute, the claim does not vanish — read Medical negligence claim survives the doctor's death.

FAQ

  1. Q: Civil or criminal negligence — which is which? Civil negligence is a failure of reasonable care and leads to compensation in the Consumer Forum or civil court. Criminal negligence is gross and rash, and can lead to prosecution under Section 304A IPC. RTI helps both lanes because it pulls out the Council's record either way.
  2. Q: State Medical Council or NMC — who hears my complaint? The complaint is filed with the State Medical Council first. The EMRB inside the NMC hears appeals. For cross-state issues or where the Council sits idle, the NMC portal is the parallel window.
  3. Q: What if the Council says it has no file in my name? Ask again by RTI for the complaint register entries around the date you filed. A missing file is itself a disclosure — take it to the Information Commission and then the High Court.
  4. Q: Can I get the depositions of the enquiry committee? Yes, under Section 6(1), subject only to the exemptions in Section 8. Depositions of the complainant and the doctor are ordinarily disclosable; third-party personal details may be severed.
  5. Q: Do I need a lawyer to file this RTI? No. The template above is enough. A lawyer helps only at the appeal or writ stage.

Going further

If your Council reply is slow or evasive, the appeal ladder and the writ route are explained in plain language in The RTI Playbook — a free, step-by-step reference for citizens filing and chasing RTI applications. Pair the template above with the Playbook's appeal drafting and complaint-tracking chapters so a single application does not stall at the first silence.

This site runs on citizen support. If this guide helped you hold a Council to account, make a small donation to keep the Playbook and these explainers free for the next family that gets no answer.

Sources

  1. National Medical Commission Act, 2019 (Act 30 of 2019) — India Code, https://www.indiacode.nic.in/handle/123456789/11820?locale=en
  2. NMC RMP Professional Conduct Regulations, 2022 (Sections 39-45)
  3. Right to Information Rules, 2012, Rule 3 (Rs.10 fee for central public authorities), G.S.R. 603(E) dated 31 July 2012
  4. Indian Medical Association v. V.P. Shantha, (1995) 6 SCC 651 — SCI DigiSCR
  5. Jacob Mathew v. State of Punjab, (2005) 6 SCC 1 — Indian Kanoon
  6. NMC Complaints Portal — https://www.nmc.org.in/complaints/
  7. Kerala State Medical Council RTI page (Rs.10 fee, 30-day limit)

Last reviewed: 4 July 2026.

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