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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 Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust v HB [2018] EWCOP 39 (30 August 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2018/39.html Cite as: [2018] EWCOP 39 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS BIRMINGHAM NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Applicant |
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HB (by her Litigation Friend, the Official Solicitor) |
First Respondent |
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- and - |
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FB |
Second Respondent |
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REPORTING RESTRICTIONS / ANONYMISATION APPLIES |
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MR S MATTHEWSON (instructed by the Official Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent.
MS N KHALIQUE QC (instructed by Higgs & Sons Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Second Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE KEEHAN:
Introduction
Background
"We therefore agree that our main therapeutic goal will be to facilitate her being able to be discharged to a neurological rehabilitation centre, such as Specialist Care Hospital. To this end, she will have a tracheostomy placed followed by a plan to liberate from the ventilator. Following 48 hours of continuous liberation from ventilation, she will be stepped down to HDU and then referrals to Specialist Care Hospital made. It was agreed CPR would not be performed in the event of cardiac arrest and a respect form is in the notes. In terms of escalation of all other forms of organ support, we emphasise this would probably do nothing to help her brain injury but said any decision to offer or not offer this would be fully discussed with them. As such, there is no pre-emptive plan to withhold giving such therapy. It is likely such decisions would require another formal best interests meeting to adopt a consensus."
"HB has extensive co-morbidities. These include heart failure, diabetes and chronic renal failure. These co-morbidities significantly decrease her resilience and the likelihood of intervention being successful in the long term. Essentially, her body was already compromised prior to her cardiac arrest. Her reserves were already below that of the average person. Her cardiac arrest and subsequent hypoxic brain injury have only worsened this. An admission to critical care increases frailty in all situations. HB is now immobile and bed bound. All her muscle groups are profoundly weak, including respiratory muscles and those used to cough. The combination of these factors makes her particularly prone to infection. Repeated infections and invasive treatments, because of the physical impact that the treatments have on her body, will only worsen this prognosis. She is highly unlikely to survive repeated infections even with the provision of ITU care.
HB's neurological condition remains unchanged. She opens her eyes, occasionally responds to pain. She cannot communicate and there is no evidence she has awareness of her surroundings. I have considered the evidence provided by HB's family of their view as to her response to them. HB has 24/7 nursing care. Having discussed this with the nursing team caring for HB around the clock, they do not agree with the responses indicated by the family. I have reviewed HB's ICU charts, which monitor, amongst many other factors, her neurological observations and interactions, responses to family and staff. These do not support any level of awareness or responsiveness, as indicated by HB's family.
A small proportion of patients in HB's condition, up to 10%, may go on to gain some awareness by six months post-the index injury. Given her frailty as outlined above, there is a high chance she will not survive to this point. In my view, given these factors, it is highly unlikely that HB will fall within the 10% of patients who do neurologically improve. Any further insult, such as infection leading to multiple organ failure, will reduce the possibility of neurological improvement further due to the further detrimental impact on her brain. Even if HB were to be one of the 10% of patients who experience some improvement in awareness, the level of her neurological insult means that she will be totally dependent for all aspects of living. It is vanishingly unlikely that she will ever be able to live outside of a 24/7 nursing care environment. If she were ever able to be discharged from an acute hospital environment, she will not recover any meaningful level of function to the extent that she would be independently mobile, be able to eat and drink orally or communicate beyond a level of blinking.
HB has a very grave prognosis. It is only expected that HB's frailty and physiological complications will increase over time. In her current condition, she may suddenly and unpredictably succumb to infection, a cardiac arrest or a respiratory arrest, or she may simply soldier on for several weeks. I have described the imminent and medium-term physical risks above. In the long term, even if HB is able to survive for a longer period of time, she will ultimately die of pneumonia or other overwhelming infection due to her described frailty and dependency. This is even if she were to receive all invasive treatments. If she does survive, her physiological condition will remain unchanged, i.e. bed bound and highly dependent, continuing to make invasive ITU care highly likely to be unsuccessful. She has already succumbed to pneumonia and, in my opinion, it is only a matter of time before she suffers a further infection with increasingly serious consequences."
"I consider that HB is frail. I would grade her Clinical Frailty Score as CFS 7. From what the clinical team have told me, I believe they may consider her CFS to be 8. I based my conclusion on her CFS on the clinical response she had made to antibiotics that were commenced for a hospital-acquired pneumonia on 22 August 2018 and my examination of her on 24 August 2018. It is my opinion that, based on my experience, the ICU literature and her CFS, it is more likely than not that she would die if she were to suffer a deterioration that required multi-organ support. For the same reasons, it is my opinion that it is more likely than not that she would not be able to be resuscitated should she suffer another cardiac arrest. Having a high CFS is associated with a reduction in the likelihood of surviving critical illness and of making a good functional recovery, even if survival occurs. Probability of survival is not the same as whether a treatment can be considered to be in an individual's best interests to receive it."
"This is not to say that she will make a full recovery and it is my opinion that she is highly likely to be fully dependent on carers for all activities of daily living for the rest of her life. However, it is my opinion that it is too early to predict the extent of HB's recovery, taking into account the national guidelines on the diagnosis of prolonged disorders of consciousness. In my experience of managing patients similar to HB, I have experience of several making a marked neurological improvement over the course of several months."
"(1) The tracheostomy will be downsized within the next 24 to 48 hours, clinical condition permitting.
(2) Her arterial line will be removed. This is accordance with best practice to minimise the risk of infection.
(3) Following the conclusion of her current course of antibiotics, her intravenous line would be removed.
(4) Plans will be make for the transfer to the respiratory ward, with a tracheostomy tube in situ, where she will be under the care of Consultant, Respiratory Medicine.
(5) HB will be referred for a neuro-rehabilitation opinion from Specialist Care Hospital.
(6) Ward-based care will be provided by the medical team. This includes nursing care, continued administration, nutrition, hydration and medication through her NG tube; physiological and neurological monitoring, continued tracheostomy care and monitoring suction for secretions. If she were to develop any condition which required non-invasive treatment, which would be delivered through intravenous lines, such as antibiotics or fluids, this would be provided subject to the clinicians being able to site an intravenous line."
"(1) In the event of a further cardiac arrest, no attempts at cardio-pulmonary resuscitation will be undertaken.
(2) In the event that HB's renal function deteriorated, renal replacement therapy will not be initiated.
(3) No invasive monitoring, such as arterial or central venal pressure measurement, will be undertaken.
(4) No vasoactive drugs will be administered to support her blood pressure.
(5) Not for further ventilatory support in the event of deterioration.
(6) Following HB's transfer from ITU, HDU to ward, HB will not be considered for readmission to critical care in the event of deterioration.
In the case of (1) to (6) above, the consensus view in each case is that such interventions would be futile because they will not change, treat, cure or alter her underlying brain injury. They would have no prospect of allowing HB to resume a meaningful quality of life and would, in each case, impose burdens upon her in terms of loss of comfort and dignity that could not be balanced against the benefits they could produce."
The Law
"Before turning to the central questions in the case, it is worth restating the basic position with regard to medical treatment, because it is upon this foundation that everything else is built. Although the concentration is upon the withdrawal of CANH, it must be kept in mind that the fundamental question facing a doctor, or a court, considering treatment of a patient who is not able to make his or her own decision is not whether it is lawful to withdraw or withhold treatment, but whether it is lawful to give it. It is lawful to give treatment only if it is in the patient's best interests. Accordingly, if the treatment would not be in the patient's best interests, then it would be unlawful to give it, and therefore lawful, and not a breach of any duty to the patient, to withhold or withdraw it. For a recent authoritative statement to this effect, see the Aintree case, although I would add that if a doctor carries out treatment in the reasonable belief that it will be in the patient's best interests, he or she will be entitled to the protection from liability conferred by section 5 of the MCA 2005. It is also important to keep in mind that a patient cannot require a doctor to give any particular form of treatment, and nor can a court."
"All reasonable steps which are in the person's best interests should be taken to prolong their life. There will be a limited number of cases where treatment is futile, overly burdensome to the patient or where there is no prospect of recovery. In circumstances such as these, it may be that an assessment of best interests leads to the conclusion that it would be in the best interests of the patient to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining treatment, even if this may result in the person's death. The decision-maker must make a decision based on the best interests of the person who lacks capacity. They must not be motivated by a desire to bring about the person's death for whatever reason, even if this is from a sense of compassion. Healthcare and social care staff should also refer to relevant professional guidance when making decisions regarding life-sustaining treatment."
"The authorities are all agreed that the starting point is a strong presumption that it is in a person's best interests to stay alive. As Sir Thomas Bingham MR said in the Court of Appeal in Bland, at p 808, 'A profound respect for the sanctity of human life is embedded in our law and our moral philosophy'. Nevertheless, they are also all agreed that this is not an absolute. There are cases where it will not be in a patient's best interests to receive life-sustaining treatment."
"39 The most that can be said, therefore, is that in considering the best interests of this particular patient at this particular time, decision-makers must look at his welfare in the widest sense, not just medical but social and psychological; they must consider the nature of the medical treatment in question, what it involves and its prospects of success; they must consider what the outcome of that treatment for the patient is likely to be; they must try and put themselves in the place of the individual patient and ask what his attitude to the treatment is or would be likely to be; and they must consult others who are looking after him or interested in his welfare, in particular for their view of what his attitude would be.
40. In my view, therefore, Peter Jackson J was correct in his approach. Given the genesis of the concepts used in the Code of Practice, he was correct to consider whether the proposed treatments would be futile in the sense of being ineffective or being of no benefit to the patient. Two of the treatments had been tried before and had worked. He was also correct to say that 'recovery does not mean a return to full health, but the resumption of a quality of life which Mr James would regard as worthwhile'. He clearly did consider that the treatments in question were very burdensome. But he considered that those burdens had to be weighed against the benefits of a continued existence. He was also correct to see the assessment of the medical effects of the treatment as only part of the equation. Regard had to be had to the patient's welfare in the widest sense, and great weight to be given to Mr James' family life which was 'of the closest and most meaningful kind'.
41. Perhaps above all, he was right to be cautious about making declarations in circumstances which were not fully predictable or fluctuating. The judge was invited to address the question whether it would be lawful to withhold any or all of these treatments. But if he had been asked the right question, whether it would be in the patient's best interests to give any or all of them should the occasion arise, his answer would clearly have been to the same effect. He would have said, as he was entitled to say that, on the evidence before him, it was too soon to say that it was not. That conclusion is quite consistent with his statement that 'for what it is worth' he thought it unlikely that further CPR would be in the patient's best interests."
"43. Thus it is setting the goal too high to say that treatment is futile unless it has 'a real prospect of curing or at least palliating the life-threatening disease or illness from which the patient is suffering'… Given its genesis in Bland, this seems the more likely meaning to be attributed to the word as used in the Code of Practice. A treatment may bring some benefit to the patient even though it has no effect upon the underlying disease or disability. The Intensive Care Society and the Faculty of Intensive Medicine, who have helpfully intervened in this appeal, supported the test proposed by Sir Alan Ward. But this was because they believed that it reflected clinical practice in which '"futility" would normally be understood as meaning that the patient cannot benefit from a medical intervention because he or she will not survive with treatment'…
44 I also respectfully disagree with the statement that 'no prospect of recovery' means 'no prospect of recovering such a state of good health as will avert the looming prospect of death if the life-sustaining treatment is given'. At least on the evidence before the judge, this was not, as Sir Alan Ward put it, a situation in which the patient was 'actively dying'."
Evidence
Analysis