Dorothy Flower > RPC > London, England > Lawyer Profile

RPC
TOWER BRIDGE HOUSE
ST KATHARINE'S WAY
LONDON
E1W 1AA
England
Dorothy Flower photo

Work Department

Medical.

Position

One of the leading medical malpractice lawyers in the UK, Partner Dorothy Flower heads up RPC’s Medical/Life Sciences team. Dorothy’s practice is far reaching. She regularly defends private sector organisations and individuals in clinical negligence cases, acts for manufacturers and suppliers of medical devices and pharmaceuticals involved in product liability claims, and defends CROs involved in injury claims in connection with clinical trials. She also represents properly interested persons at inquests, often in connection with potential litigation. The regulatory side to her practice sees Dorothy assisting individuals investigated by the General Medical Council, Health and Care Professions Council and other regulatory bodies. She also advises organisations on Care Quality Commission regulation. For insurers, she regular advises on policy coverage and helps to draft policy wordings.

Career

Recent work highlights

Acting for Spire Healthcare in the inquests into the deaths of up to 100 patients of Ian Paterson for breast surgery, coupled with management of the Paterson Patients Compensation Fund.

Acted for Corin Limited in metal-on-metal hip group litigation in the UK, and managing the defence of claims against Corin in Europe, Australia, Japan, and Canada.

Acting for a London cosmetic surgery clinic in claims arising from the negligent performance of cosmetic procedures and the inappropriate conduct of a surgeon.

Lawyer Rankings

London > Industry focus > Life sciences and healthcare

(Leading partners)

Dorothy FlowerRPC

London > Dispute resolution > Professional discipline

RPC‘s 20-strong professional practices group focuses on regulatory issues concerning legal services, insolvency practitioners, accountants, architects, and healthcare professionals. Its workload covers a range of contentious areas, including internal and regulatory investigations, regulatory reporting obligations, and disciplinary proceedings. The group is co-led by Graham Reid, who ‘lives up to his reputation’; and Robert Morris, who specialises in claims against accountants, financial professionals and insurance brokers. The practice further includes Dorothy Flower, who assists GMC and HCPC-investigated individuals; Davina Given, an expert in financial services and accountancy disciplinary matters; and Tom Wild, who is ‘destined for greatness’.

London > Insurance > Product liability: defendant

(Leading partners)

Dorothy FlowerRPC

RPC‘s product liability team has ‘the strength and depth to deal with the entire spectrum of litigated cases in this arena, including catastrophic and complex cases‘, and is particularly well known for its representation of insurers. Its broad practice encompasses claims in a variety of sectors, with a strong emphasis on the medical device and pharmaceutical industries. Gavin Reese and Dorothy Flower lead the team; Flower is praised as ‘adept at understanding the interplay between the underlying issues and the insurance considerations‘, and Reese is often involved in cross-border product liability matters. Mamata Dutta, who ‘combines a tremendous intellect with an encyclopaedic knowledge of the law’, and Fiona Hahlo are also key names within the group.

London > Insurance > Clinical negligence: defendant

(Hall of Fame)

Dorothy FlowerRPC

Highlighted for its combination of ‘commercial sense and healthcare experience’, RPC’s medical and life sciences team operates in complex paediatric and obstetric cases, and advises on the full spectrum of catastrophic injury disputes, including psychiatric, cosmetic, cognitive and spinal injury claims. ‘First-class lawyer and team leaderDorothy Flower is noted for her extensive experience in fatal claims, inquests and cross-border cases. Praised for being ‘able to quickly identify the key issues and see potential routes forward’, Sian Morgan is skilled in emergency health, pharmaceutical and misdiagnosis cases, in addition to catastrophic injuries.