SINGAPORE – To prove its case for professional misconduct by a well-known surgeon, the Singapore Medical Council (SMC) in 2012 engaged surgeon Hong Ga Sze as an expert witness to give evidence.
But when the case ended, SMC received a complaint against Hong, also for overcharging. SMC then had to take Hong to task for billing the medical watchdog $42,800 for his services in the case.
Although the complaint did not originate from SMC, the council was bound, as the regulator, to take the case through the disciplinary process.
The name of the complainant was redacted.
SMC made three legal attempts – in 2015, 2018 and most recently in 2023 – but failed each time, although Hong’s bill was slashed.
The case is linked to one of the nation’s most infamous medical overcharging cases, involving surgeon Susan Lim who charged a patient – linked to the Brunei royal family – $24 million for medical services.
A disciplinary tribunal threw out the case against Hong, and acquitted him of the professional misconduct charges, 14 years after he took the stand in Lim’s case.
The tribunal, chaired by dean of Singapore University of Social Sciences’ law school Leslie Chew, held two hearings in 2025, on Jan 13 and May 30.
Its decision was revealed on May 25, 2026, when SMC published the decision grounds on its website.
On dismissing SMC’s case, the tribunal explained that in bringing the charges of professional misconduct against Hong, SMC must prove them beyond a reasonable doubt.
However, the tribunal found that the evidence put forward by SMC “fails to prove that (Hong’s) fees are grossly excessive or that he charged fees that are disproportionate to what he could have charged”.
It also noted that even SMC’s own expert witness, whose identity was redacted in the decision grounds and named only as PE, said that Hong did not overcharge SMC.
“To put it bluntly, Dr PE’s evidence on behalf of the SMC does not appear to prove the charges, instead they show that the charges are unfounded”, stated the tribunal.
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