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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Border v Lewisham And Greenwich NHS Trust [2015] EWCA Civ 8 (21 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/8.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 8 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
HHJ Moloney QC
No. 0CF07459
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
MR JUSTICE NEWEY
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Anita Border |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust (formerly South London Healthcare NHS Trust) |
Respondent |
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Claire Toogood (instructed by Kennedys Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 16 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
"1. This is a clinical negligence claim based on the events of the afternoon of 15th October 2008. The claimant, then aged sixty-four, was brought into the Accident & Emergency department, specifically the resuscitation room, of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Woolwich. She had a suspected broken right humerus. The senior house officer on duty, Dr Prenter, was unable to put an IV into her right arm for the obvious reason that that was or appeared to be the broken arm and was therefore unsuitable. He proposed to put an IV line, a cannula, into the left arm, as would be the normal practice in that situation; but the claimant said to him words to this effect (and I am summarising for the purposes of clarity): 'No, don't do that. I've recently had a left mammectomy and axillary node clearance' (she probably did not use those words, but she explained that she had had her lymph nodes cleared) 'in the left arm and you mustn't cut that arm or I might get an oedema'. The doctor, however, did decide for reasons that I shall consider further to put the IV in her left arm. Unfortunately for all concerned, the worst happened. She did get an infection on the site of the cannula and the consequence has been a permanent and fairly serious case of oedema in her left arm which has caused her a permanent and material level of disability in her left arm. Unsurprisingly in these circumstances, she has now sued the hospital."
"10. There was a disputed issue – and this is the point where I prefer, broadly speaking, Mrs Border's evidence to Dr Prenter's – as to how much Dr Prenter said to Mrs Border about his decision to insert the cannula, notwithstanding her warning, and whether she consented expressly or impliedly by word or gesture to his decision to insert it into her left arm. I note, in particular, that there is nothing in his December note to suggest that she either consented or co-operated. He said that he checked to see whether there was anywhere else that he could insert it. He had excluded the right arm for reasons of breakage, he was being asked to exclude the left arm and there was obviously a cogent reason to do so if a third site could be found. The obvious site was the legs. He examined her legs, but because of her general physical condition it was very difficult to find a suitable vein in her legs to make the insertion. He therefore decided that he would have to go ahead with the left arm, notwithstanding the possibility of oedema. My conclusion on the balance of probabilities is that this was a quick and silent calculation on his part, but that it was made. I do not accept that he communicated it to Mrs Border in any detail. He probably said little more than 'I'm sorry, but we really need to put it in the left arm' or words to that effect. There was not any direct evidence on this, but, I think, if he did say anything to her, it would not have been much more than that. I do not accept his suggestion that she positively consented by holding her arm out in a co-operative manner. I prefer her evidence which is that she hardly realised until, as she said, 'Bang, it was done'. So he took the decision and he acted upon it in the conditions of a resuscitation room. That is not of itself a matter of great criticism."
"16. … Dr Prenter found himself in a genuine doctor's dilemma. He had good reasons for wishing to put an IV in, but there was no viable alternative site for the IV line than the left arm. But there was also a good reason not to insert an IV line in that left arm, a recognised medical condition of which he was expressly warned by the patient herself. His choice really was simply: to use the left arm now and make an immediate insertion; or to wait and see whether it would be necessary to use the left arm in a future moment if the situation warranted it. There is no evidence before me that he gave any serious consideration to 'wait and see', but, looking at it from the stand point of the expert evidence, it would be a brave decision for a Senior House Officer not to follow the standard practice – which, I think, both of the consultants accepted – that an IV line should, if possible, be inserted in the early stage. The logic is clear: in an uncertain and potentially dangerous situation it is better to be ready, even if there is a slight risk of an adverse known side effect."
The rival submissions on the appeal
Discussion
"Can I say this, I am looking at counsel here: my sense in this case, but you can correct me if you want, is that consent or no consent or indicated consent is not really the issue here. The doctor gave the advice and the doctor did it in an emergency situation. That may or may not have been within the permitted range of options …" (day 1, page 82).
"But, as I have indicated, I do not regard the consent issue as important in this case. I stand to be corrected if I am wrong about it. It is an emergency room and the question is whether or not it was a right thing to do …" (day 3, page 39).
In a medical emergency, when the patient is incapable of giving consent, a doctor may proceed without consent provided that he or she is acting in the patient's best interests (see, for example, St George's Healthcare NHS Trust v S [1999] Fam 26 at 45B). The judge may have had that principle in mind. On the evidence, however, this was not such a case of medical emergency. The claimant was in the emergency room – the resuscitation room – but she was fully conscious and capable of giving or withholding her consent. The judge was therefore wrong to regard the issue of consent as unimportant.
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
Mr Justice Newey :