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How to Sue a Government Hospital in Malaysia (2026): A Doctor-Lawyer’s Guide

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How to Sue a Government Hospital in Malaysia (2026): A Doctor-Lawyer’s Guide

How to Sue a Government Hospital in Malaysia (2026): A Doctor-Lawyer’s Guide

Who is the defendant?

The proper defendants are typically:

  1. Government of Malaysia (Federal Government) — for federal hospitals (HKL, HUKM, etc.) named under section 24 of the Government Proceedings Act 1956.
  2. State Government — for state-run hospitals (Hospital Sultanah Aminah Johor Bahru, Hospital Sultan Ismail JB, Hospital Sultanah Fatimah Muar, etc.).
  3. The treating doctor — named as second defendant (vicarious liability is on the government, but the doctor’s individual conduct is the focus).
  4. Hospital Director — for systemic failings (e.g., understaffing, inadequate protocols).

Service of process on the government is governed by section 25 of the Government Proceedings Act 1956 — through the Attorney General’s Chambers (Putrajaya) or the relevant State Legal Adviser.

The notice requirement under the Public Authorities Protection Act 1948

Section 2 of the Public Authorities Protection Act 1948 requires a written notice to the public authority before commencing proceedings. The notice should contain:

  • Plaintiff’s name, address, IC
  • The nature of the claim — what happened, when, where, who
  • The injuries suffered (with medical evidence summary)
  • The relief sought (damages, declaration, specific performance, injunction)

Some Malaysian cases have held the notice requirement is procedural and can be cured. Others have treated it as a strict precondition. Always serve a notice — even if the court might excuse non-compliance, you don’t want that fight.

The limitation period — 36 months or 3 years from knowledge?

Two limitation regimes apply:

  • Public Authorities Protection Act 1948: 36 months from the act, neglect, or default complained of.
  • Limitation Act 1953 section 24A: 3 years from the date of knowledge (when you knew or could have known of the injury and its cause), with a longstop of 15 years from the date of negligence.

For medical negligence in particular — where injuries can take months or years to manifest — section 24A is your friend. But the safer view is to treat 36 months as the operative deadline and file within that period.

Examples of when limitation starts:

  • Surgical injury immediately apparent — date of surgery
  • Misdiagnosis later corrected — date you learned of the correct diagnosis
  • Birth injury — usually when the parents learn the child’s condition was avoidable; longstop is 15 years
  • Drug error with delayed onset — date the drug-related cause was identified by another doctor

Evidence — what you need

  • Complete medical records — request from the hospital under the Personal Data Protection Act 2010 and the Mental Health Act 2001 (for psychiatric records). Hospitals must respond within 30 days.
  • Independent expert report — typically from a doctor in the same specialty in private practice or a different government hospital. The report addresses standard of care, departure, and causation.
  • Death certificate / autopsy report (where applicable)
  • Witness statements — family members present during the treatment, fellow staff (if you can secure them), other patients
  • The signed consent forms — particularly for Foo Fio Na (failure to inform of material risks) claims
  • Photos / video — of the injury, the hospital environment, the equipment used
  • Earnings evidence — payslips, EA forms, business accounts (for loss of earnings claims)
  • Future care plan — costed by an expert occupational therapist or physician

Defences typically raised by the government

  • Bolam-Bolitho test — that the doctor acted in line with responsible medical opinion (see our Bolam Test Malaysia article).
  • Causation — the injury was caused by the underlying disease or pre-existing condition, not the doctor’s act.
  • Limitation — claim filed too late under the Public Authorities Protection Act.
  • Inadequate notice — section 2 PAPA requirements not met.
  • Contributory negligence — patient’s failure to follow medical advice.
  • Voluntary assumption of risk — patient consented to the procedure with full knowledge of risks.

Damages — what you can recover

General damages (pain, suffering, loss of amenities)

Awarded in line with Malaysian benchmarks set out in the Compendium of Personal Injury Awards. Indicative ranges:

  • Paraplegia / quadriplegia: RM 250,000 to RM 600,000
  • Severe brain damage: RM 200,000 to RM 500,000
  • Loss of limb / amputation: RM 80,000 to RM 250,000
  • Severe scarring / disfigurement: RM 30,000 to RM 100,000
  • Loss of fertility: RM 50,000 to RM 200,000

Special damages

  • Medical expenses to date (receipts required)
  • Future medical expenses (with expert evidence on cost of ongoing care)
  • Loss of earnings (proved by EA forms, payslips, business accounts)
  • Loss of future earning capacity (life expectancy x annual income x discount factor)
  • Cost of care — domestic help, nursing, therapy
  • Cost of equipment — wheelchair, prosthetics, modifications to home

Aggravated and exemplary damages

Available where the conduct was particularly egregious — wilful disregard of safety, cover-up, falsification of records, repeated similar incidents. These are rarely awarded but signal the court’s disapproval.

Why a doctor-lawyer is invaluable for hospital cases

I am Dr Chee Hui Bing — a qualified medical doctor and Advocate & Solicitor. For government hospital cases this combination matters because:

  • Reading medical records — government hospital records are often handwritten, abbreviated, and use clinical shorthand. I read them as a clinician would, identifying critical entries (or worrying gaps).
  • Identifying departures from standard of care — recognising when a particular drug dose, surgical approach, or post-operative regime departed from accepted clinical practice.
  • Cross-examining doctors — government hospital defendants are usually senior doctors. They expect to be deferred to by lay lawyers. They don’t expect to be challenged on their clinical reasoning by a fellow medic.
  • Causation analysis — distinguishing harm caused by the underlying disease from harm caused by the negligent act, which is often the central issue.
  • Advising on future care — understanding what ongoing medical and rehabilitative care will be needed, to support a realistic damages claim.

Government hospitals we have acted against

We have advised on or pursued claims involving:

  • Hospital Sultanah Aminah, Johor Bahru
  • Hospital Sultan Ismail, Johor Bahru
  • Hospital Sultanah Fatimah, Muar
  • Hospital Pakar Sultanah Fatimah, Muar
  • Hospital Permai (psychiatric)
  • Hospital Pengajar Universiti Sains Malaysia (HUSM)
  • Hospital Tengku Ampuan Rahimah, Klang
  • Hospital Kuala Lumpur (HKL)
  • Hospital Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (HUKM)
  • Klinik Kesihatan in Batu Pahat, Muar, Kluang

(Specific case details are confidential. The list reflects the institutional defendants we have engaged with.)

How much does it cost to sue a government hospital?

Indicative ranges:

  • Pre-action notice and review of records: RM 5,000 to RM 15,000
  • Independent expert report: RM 5,000 to RM 25,000 (specialist-dependent)
  • Filing the suit through trial: RM 50,000 to RM 200,000+ depending on complexity
  • Counsel fees for High Court trial: typically 50-70% of overall fees

Costs are usually recoverable from the defendant if you succeed. Some firms (including ours) operate on partial-contingency or staged-fee arrangements for strong cases — we share the risk if there’s a good chance of success.

Free 30-minute consultation

If you or a family member has been injured by a government hospital — or you’re considering whether you have a claim — please contact us. The 36-month clock runs fast and notice requirements must be met.

For more, see our Medical Negligence Lawyer Malaysia practice page.

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