Il grado della colpa nel diritto penale della medicina: le ragioni per una ‘riforma delle riforme’
Abstract
The present work examines the most critical interpretative issues on the
subject of healthcare professional negligence. Starting from the supplementary role
of Court decisions, the work analyses the current regulatory framework with some
reflections de iure condendo. The results of the debate that has developed so far
will lead to the acknowledgment of the inability of the criminal law of medicine -
as arranged by recent reforms - to stem the phenomenon of defensive medicine, the
result of recourse to the trial conceived as a sanction. Hence there is the need to
rethink the categories of traditional criminal law, in order to recognize the guilt's
degree as a selective criterion of the criminal (ir)relevance in a political-criminal
function, derogatory from the classical commensurative one. This new criminal
regulation based on the guilt's degree is at the dawn of an "unpublished" criminal
law, and thus of a path towards the "reform of the reforms". The aforesaid reform
should be able to interpret the 'light' guilt's degree into a sort of 'criminal shield ',
with the intention of preventing the rush to the trial and of achieving the most
rational balance between doctor’s free choices of action and the protection of the
patients' right to health.