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SINGAPORE — In a dramatic turn of events, the National University Hospital (NUH) abruptly withdrew bankruptcy proceedings against former patient Philip Soh Keng Cheang just one hour before his scheduled court hearing in February. The 61-year-old, who owed over $290,000 in legal costs and unpaid hospital bills following an unsuccessful negligence lawsuit against NUH, was unexpectedly spared from bankruptcy after hospital administrators discovered he qualified as a fully subsidized nursing home resident.
The eleventh-hour decision came too late to prevent the technical declaration of bankruptcy during the February 6 hearing when communication delays prevented NUH's lawyers from being informed in time. However, more than two months later, the High Court approved NUH's request to rescind the bankruptcy order entirely.
Assistant Registrar Elton Tan outlined his reasoning in written grounds published on May 29, noting that while NUH's change of position occurred before the bankruptcy order was made, "the unfortunate consequence of certain events" beyond either party's control prevented this information from reaching him during the initial hearing. He emphasized that maintaining the bankruptcy order would create "an obvious injustice," especially since NUH had chosen not to pursue proceedings on compassionate grounds after reviewing Soh's physical condition and financial circumstances.
The complex case traces back to 2014 when Soh underwent spinal neck surgery at NUH. After experiencing post-operative weakness and partial paralysis, he sued the hospital for allegedly failing to timely diagnose his peripheral neuropathy - a condition involving damage to nerves outside the brain and spinal cord. The High Court dismissed his claim in October 2021 after finding insufficient evidence of negligence.
The court ordered Soh to pay $26,463.73 in outstanding medical bills plus $237,410.22 in legal costs. When he failed to respond to a December 2024 statutory demand for $292,001.24 (including interest), NUH initiated bankruptcy proceedings - unaware that their former patient had become dependent on social assistance.
The pivotal moment came three days before the scheduled February 6 videoconference hearing when Soh informed the court via letter about residing at Woodlands Care Home since February 2018 with no income source and full subsidy coverage for all expenses through Singapore's Medical Fee Exemption Card scheme (requiring under $6,000 savings and monthly per capita family income below $800).
After verifying these details through medical social workers by early afternoon on hearing day - confirming eligibility criteria including residence at a publicly funded facility - CEO Aymeric Lim issued withdrawal instructions around 1:30pm. But attempts failed to reach their lawyer before Judge Tan proceeded with declaring Soh bankrupt at approximately 2:30pm due purely administrative delays rather than substantive disagreement between parties involved regarding appropriate resolution given new information about defendant’s situation emerging shortly prior but not communicated effectively across institutional channels quickly enough given tight timeframe involved between verification completion (~1pm) versus scheduled start time (~2:30pm).
A swift response followed next morning as Rajah & Tann Senior Counsel Kelvin Poon filed formal motions including detailed affidavit explaining sequence leading up reversal decision along supporting legal arguments ultimately resulting successful vacation original ruling based principles fairness considering changed circumstances once full facts became known institutionally if not judicially until slightly afterward through no fault either side directly causing oversight occurring despite best efforts those involved acting good faith throughout process according records presented during subsequent review proceedings which culminated recent publication official rationale behind judicial actions taken address matter appropriately moving forward without lingering adverse consequences plaintiff who otherwise might have faced unnecessary hardship absent this intervention despite technically valid initial claims regarding debt collection responsibilities hospitals must balance against broader societal obligations particularly vulnerable populations like long-term care residents receiving substantial government assistance already indicating limited means satisfy such obligations regardless merit underlying dispute originally giving rise financial liabilities question here specifically context healthcare-related litigation where power dynamics often weigh heavily favor institutional defendants individual plaintiffs especially those experiencing significant health challenges themselves potentially limiting ability advocate effectively own behalf various stages legal processes involved complex cases spanning multiple years different phases adjudication appeals etcetera...
When contacted by The Straits Times regarding developments surrounding case resolution approach adopted following discovery new information about Mr.So’s current living situation eligibility various forms public assistance available Singapore citizens meeting certain criteria related both health socioeconomic status factors among others considered relevant determining appropriate course action particular instance representative National University Health System provided statement emphasizing need balance fiscal responsibility compassion saying quote While rationale initial action remains valid we have carefully considered circumstances determined this case warrants alternative resolution unquote adding they remain committed working towards amicable solution ongoing basis future interactions affected individual acknowledging previous attempts encourage utilization existing insurance mechanisms like MediShield reportedly declined authorization paperwork completion thereby limiting options reducing out pocket expenses earlier point timeline overall narrative suggests possible communication barriers misunderstanding between parties different stages engagement prior recent breakthrough leading withdrawal petition entirely rather pursuing modified payment arrangement example reflecting adaptive responsive policymaking implementation frontline staff dealing real world complexities human situations don't always fit neatly predefined bureaucratic categories procedures designed handle majority cases efficiently but sometimes requiring flexibility exceptional circumstances warrant deviation standard protocols achieve more equitable outcomes all things considered...
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