Medical Negligence
MUKAMBA & COMPANY ADVOCATES
Medical Negligence in Kenya:
Your Rights & Remedies
Litigation & Dispute Resolution Practice — 2026
info@mukambalaw.com | +254 706 223 157 | mukambalaw.com | West Park Towers, Westlands, Nairobi
The right to the highest attainable standard of health is guaranteed under Article 43(1)(a) of the Constitution of Kenya, 2010. When that promise is broken by the very professionals entrusted to protect it, the law provides a clear path to justice.
Medical negligence occurs when a healthcare provider — a doctor, nurse, clinical officer, or hospital — deviates from the accepted standard of care and that deviation causes harm to a patient. It is a serious breach of legal duty and patient trust, and Kenyan courts have increasingly demonstrated willingness to hold healthcare providers and institutions fully accountable.
Section One
What Is Medical Negligence?
Medical negligence — also referred to as medical malpractice — arises where a healthcare provider deviates from accepted standards of medical practice and that deviation directly causes harm to a patient.
A poor outcome alone does not establish negligence; the question is whether the provider fell below the standard a reasonably competent professional in their field would have applied.
THE BOLAM TEST A medical practitioner is not guilty of negligence if they acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical opinion. This standard, affirmed in Kenyan courts including Trustees Registered Maua Methodist Hospital v Penina Thirindi Koome, remains the foundational benchmark. |
Kenyan courts have also adopted the Bolitho refinement — requiring not only that a body of medical opinion endorses the practice, but that the opinion be logically defensible.
In Mathenge v Kenya Hospital Association t/a Nairobi Hospital [2025] KEHC 5018 (KLR), the High Court restated the standard: “the test in cases of medical negligence is not that of any other ordinary person but that of a person in the same profession.”
Section Two
The Legal Framework
Constitution of Kenya, 2010
Article 43(1)(a) guarantees every person the right to the highest attainable standard of health, including healthcare services. Article 43(2) provides that no person shall be denied emergency medical treatment.
Where these rights are violated, the High Court has jurisdiction under Articles 22, 23, and 165 to grant appropriate relief, including declarations, injunctions, and compensation.
The Health Act, 2017 (Act No. 21 of 2017)
Section 5 reiterates the constitutional right to health and requires providers to treat patients in a manner that upholds their dignity. Section 7 establishes the right to emergency medical treatment. Section 12 imposes a duty on healthcare providers to offer healthcare diligently and within their professional scope — a breach of which may constitute negligence.
The Medical Practitioners and Dentists Act (Cap. 253)
This Act establishes the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council (KMPDC) and its Disciplinary and Ethics Committee, which investigates professional misconduct complaints. A KMPDC finding does not yield compensation directly, but a finding of professional misconduct significantly strengthens any subsequent civil claim for damages.
ALSO RELEVANT In Oyugi v Avenue Healthcare Limited [2023] KEHC 17464 (KLR), the High Court confirmed that the constitutional right to emergency medical treatment cannot be derogated from by any healthcare facility, public or private. |
Section Three
The Four Essential Elements
To succeed in a medical negligence claim under Kenyan law, a plaintiff must establish all four of the following elements on a balance of probabilities:
01 — Duty of Care A legal obligation existed Established by the existence of a doctor-patient relationship. Once a healthcare provider undertakes to treat a patient, a duty of care arises automatically. | 02 — Breach of Duty The standard was not met The provider failed to meet the standard of a reasonably competent professional, assessed using the Bolam/Bolitho standard. |
03 — Causation The breach caused the harm The breach must directly cause or materially contribute to the patient’s injury. Expert medical evidence is ordinarily required to establish this causal link. | 04 — Damages Actual harm was suffered The patient suffered quantifiable physical, emotional, or financial harm as a direct result of the negligence. |
Section Four
Landmark Kenyan Decisions
The following decisions — all accessible via the Kenya Law Reports (kenyalaw.org) — illustrate the judicial approach to medical negligence and the level of compensation available to successful claimants.
Parkar & another v NQ & 2 others [2023] KECA 908 (KLR) Aga Khan University Hospital — KSh 157 Million Award The patient consented to removal of her uterus and ovaries. The consultant gynaecologist, Dr. Raffique Parker, removed her entire cervix without consent. The court found the hospital had allowed Dr. Parker to practise knowing he had been barred from practice in Uganda. The hospital was held to owe a non-delegable duty of care. The award comprised seven heads of damage including general damages, loss of consortium, loss of amenities, pain and suffering, loss of earning capacity, and loss of society. Award: KSh 157,207,524.20 |
Kenyatta National Hospital v Karan & another [2024] KEHC 15686 (KLR) KNH — Surgical Gauze Left Inside Patient Following surgery at KNH, the patient developed severe abdominal pain. Scans revealed a large cotton gauze had been left inside her abdomen during surgery, causing a serious infection requiring emergency surgery to remove over two litres of pus. The High Court upheld negligence, as counting sponges before closing the abdomen is standard professional practice, a step that was not performed. KNH was held vicariously liable. Award: KSh 900,414 |
Menganga v Pandya Memorial Hospital & Abdalla (High Court, Mombasa, 2024) Pandya Hospital — Misdiagnosis Causing Irreversible Hearing Loss An 81-year-old former nurse was misdiagnosed with tuberculosis despite multiple negative test results and placed on streptomycin, causing severe vertigo and partial deafness — an irreversible condition. Justice Freda Mugambi held: “Any negligence in the doctor’s duty will make the hospital vicariously liable. We find the respondents wholly liable in negligence.” Award: KSh 4,016,180 |
High Court at Nairobi, August 2025 Pumwani Maternity Hospital — Gross Negligence During Childbirth The High Court ordered Pumwani Maternity Hospital to pay compensation to a woman whose baby died and whose uterus was removed following what the court described as “gross medical negligence during childbirth.” The case underscores the particular vulnerability of maternity patients and the court’s willingness to characterise systemic failures as gross negligence. Award: KSh 7,500,000 |
“Kenyan courts have consistently held that healthcare institutions bear a non-delegable duty of care — they cannot escape liability by attributing failures to individual practitioners alone.”
Section Five
How to Bring a Medical Negligence Claim
1 | Seek Immediate Legal Advice Consult a qualified advocate specialising in medical malpractice litigation. Time limits apply — claims should be filed within three years of the date of the negligent act or knowledge thereof under the Limitation of Actions Act (Cap. 22). |
2 | Gather and Preserve All Evidence Collect all medical records, treatment notes, test results, prescriptions, discharge summaries, consent forms, photographs of injuries, and all correspondence with the healthcare provider. Your advocate will engage an independent medical expert to review the records and provide an opinion on breach and causation. |
3 | File a Complaint with the KMPDC Lodge a formal complaint with the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Council. A favourable finding of professional misconduct by the KMPDC’s Disciplinary and Ethics Committee significantly strengthens any subsequent civil claim, though it does not directly award compensation. |
4 | File a Civil Suit for Damages Your advocate will file a plaint in the appropriate court — the High Court for substantial claims — setting out the particulars of negligence, the injuries suffered, and the categories of damages claimed. The court determines liability and quantum based on evidence adduced and expert testimony. |
5 | Consider a Constitutional Petition Where the negligence amounts to a violation of the constitutional right to health under Article 43 or involves denial of emergency treatment under Article 43(2), a Constitutional Petition under Articles 22 and 23 may be pursued alongside or independently of the civil claim. |
Section Six
Types of Damages Recoverable
Special Damages Quantifiable financial losses — medical expenses, corrective surgery costs, travel costs for treatment, and verified loss of earnings — all requiring documentary proof. | General Damages Pain & suffering, loss of amenities, loss of consortium, loss of earning capacity, and emotional or psychological trauma — assessed by the court on the facts. | Aggravated Damages Available where the defendant’s conduct was particularly high-handed, oppressive, or involved deliberate concealment of material information from the patient. |
As demonstrated by the Aga Khan case — where the award of KSh 157,207,524.20 combined seven distinct heads of damage — the aggregate compensation available to a successful claimant can be substantial.
Have you suffered harm due to medical negligence? At Mukamba & Company Advocates, we combine rigorous legal expertise with a client-centred approach. We are recognised by The Legal 500 as one of the leading law firms in Kenya. We offer a free 20-minute consultation to assess the merits of your case with no obligation and complete confidentiality. Every patient who has suffered harm deserves to know whether they have a claim. We are here to tell you. Email: info@mukambalaw.com Phone: +254 706 223 157 Website: mukambalaw.com Office: West Park Towers, 11th & 12th Floor, Westlands, Nairobi |
References
• Constitution of Kenya, 2010 — Articles 22, 23, 43, 165.
• Health Act, 2017 (Act No. 21 of 2017) — Sections 5, 7, 12.
• Medical Practitioners and Dentists Act (Cap. 253, Laws of Kenya).
• Limitation of Actions Act (Cap. 22, Laws of Kenya).
• Mathenge v Kenya Hospital Association t/a Nairobi Hospital [2025] KEHC 5018 (KLR).
• Parkar & another v NQ & 2 others [2023] KECA 908 (KLR).
• Kenyatta National Hospital v Karan & another [2024] KEHC 15686 (KLR).
• Menganga v Pandya Memorial Hospital & Abdalla (High Court, Mombasa, 2024).
• Pumwani Maternity Hospital (High Court, Nairobi, August 2025).
• Oyugi v Avenue Healthcare Limited [2023] KEHC 17464 (KLR).
• Trustees Registered Maua Methodist Hospital v Penina Thirindi Koome (Bolam test affirmation).
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified advocate for advice tailored to your circumstances. © 2026 Mukamba & Company Advocates. All rights reserved.
