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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> University College London Hospitals v KG [2018] EWCOP 29 (08 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2018/29.html Cite as: [2018] EWCOP 29 |
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COURT OF PROTECTION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF THE MENTAL CAPACITY ACT 2005 |
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UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON HOSPITALS | ||
NHS FOUNDATION TRUST | Applicant | |
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(By his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) | Respondent |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
BRIDGET DOLAN QC appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"Some treatment decisions are so serious that the court has to make them ...".
This includes "cases where there is a dispute about whether a particular treatment will be in a person's best interests"
Then at 6.19 this category is explained further and
"... may include cases that introduce ethical dilemmas concerning untested or innovative treatments (for example, new treatments for variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)) where it is not known if the treatment will be effective..."
At paragraph 8.23, it is recited:
"Other cases likely to be referred to the court include those involving ethical dilemmas in untested areas (such as innovative treatments for variant CJD)..."
"Prion diseases are invariably fatal, neurodegenerative conditions, the most common of which in humans is CJD. They are all associated with the build-up in the brain and some other organs of an abnormal or rogue form of a naturally-occurring protein known as the prion protein. The rogue protein results from a change in shape of the normal prion protein. Once formed in the body, these rogue proteins (or prions) recruit and convert more of the normal prion protein into the abnormal form, setting off a kind of chain reaction which leads to a progressive accumulation of the rogue protein. Human prion diseases can arise in a number of ways, the most common form of which is sporadic CJD and there are about 100 new sporadic CJD patients diagnosed annually in the United Kingdom, and rather less than 10,000 worldwide. There are as yet no effective therapies that modify the progressive disease course of sporadic CJD and life expectancy from symptom onset is typically only four to six months. Diagnosis of sporadic CJD is typically made a substantial time after symptoms begin, meaning that the average lifespan from diagnosis is only six weeks based on the experience of the National Prion Clinic in London."
"57. The benefits that might be gained from [the treatment in that case] are less tangible and more difficult to assess. There may not be any obvious benefit or any benefit at all. ... Even though the patients will not recover, it seems to me that the concept of 'benefit' to a patient suffering from vCJD [the condition in that case] does encompass an improvement from the present state of illness, or a continuation of the existing state of illness without deterioration for a longer period than might otherwise have occurred, or the prolongation of life for a longer period than might otherwise have occurred. ... Where there is no alternative treatment available and the disease is progressive and fatal, it seems to me to be reasonable to consider experimental treatment with unknown benefits and risks, but without significant risks of increased suffering to the patient, in cases where there is some chance of benefit to the patient. A patient who is not able to consent to pioneering treatment ought not to be deprived of the chance in circumstances where he would have been likely to consent if he had been competent."
"Each patient is at present within a devoted and wonderfully caring family and is being provided with the best life possible in these tragic circumstances. I consider that even the prospect of a slightly longer life is a benefit worth having for each of these two patients. There is sufficient possibility of unquantifiable benefit for me to find that it would be in their best interests to have the operations and the treatment subject to an assessment of the risks. There is no alternative treatment available."
"The impact of refusal by this court of granting the declarations on each set of parents and, in one case, 5 siblings, and in the other case, one sibling, would in my view be enormous and palpable. In a finely balanced case I should give the views of the parents and the effect upon them of refusal great weight in the wider considerations of the best interests test which the court has to apply to each patient."
Other issues
"First [the doctor] must act at all times in accordance with a responsible and competent body of relevant professional opinion, generally described as the 'Bolam test' ... [Secondly] ... a duty to act in the best interests of a mentally incapacitated patient."
Epiq Europe Ltd hereby certify that the above is an accurate and complete record of the proceedings or part thereof.
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