Background of the Case
In April 2021 a young woman went to Life Peglerae Hospital for a caesarean section. During the surgery she suffered a small‑intestinal injury that required a second, emergency operation. After the second surgery she was moved to the intensive care unit (ICU) where Dr Mokgosi was responsible for her care.
What the Family Alleged
The woman’s father, Kereng Andrew Morakile, and a relative, Katlego MacDonald Chowe, said that by the time she reached the ICU she already had septic shock—a dangerous infection that can spread quickly. They claimed that:
- Dr Mokgosi did not answer urgent calls from nurses.
- He never examined her in person, only gave orders from a distance.
- He failed to arrange a backup doctor when he was unavailable.
According to the family, these mistakes let the infection worsen and contributed to her death.
The Doctor’s Legal Challenge
Dr Mokgosi filed an “exception,” asking the court to throw out the case before it even started. His lawyers argued that the autopsy blamed the death on complications from the intestinal injury, not on anything he did in the ICU. Because he wasn’t involved in either surgery, they said he could not be held liable.
Judge Thato Tsautse’s Ruling
Acting Judge Thato Tsautse rejected the exception. She explained that the plaintiffs never said Dr Mokgosi caused the original injury. Instead, they said his actions—or lack of actions—in the ICU allowed the infection to get worse. The judge noted that, for the purpose of deciding whether the case can go forward, the court must assume the plaintiffs’ facts are true.
She found that the complaint contained all the basic parts of a negligence claim:
- Duty of care – Dr Mokgosi was responsible for the patient while she was in the ICU.
- Breach – Alleged failures to respond, examine, and provide coverage.
- Causation – If proven, those failures could have helped the infection progress to death.
- Damages – The loss of life and suffering of the family.
Because these elements were adequately pleaded, the judge said the case deserved a trial where medical experts and ICU records could be examined.
Why This Matters for Teens
This decision shows that a doctor’s responsibility doesn’t end when the surgery is over. Even if a physician didn’t perform the operation, they still have a duty to monitor patients closely, respond quickly to warning signs, and make sure another qualified doctor is available when they can’t be present. The case reminds everyone that good communication and timely care in the ICU can be just as important as the surgery itself.
Conclusion
The North West High Court has allowed the family’s medical negligence claim to move forward. The court will now hear evidence to decide whether Dr Mokgosi’s alleged shortcomings in the ICU played a role in the young woman’s death. Whatever the outcome, the case highlights the importance of vigilant, hands‑on care for patients recovering from serious operations.


