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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> A Local Authority v A Mother & Ors [2012] EWHC 2969 (Fam) (26 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2012/2969.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2969 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE CHILDREN ACT 1989
AND IN THE MATTER OF J AND MM (CHILDREN)
B e f o r e :
____________________
A LOCAL AUTHORITY | Applicant | |
-and- | ||
(1) A MOTHER | ||
(2) A FATHER | ||
(3) J | ||
(4) MM | ||
(Children, represented by their Guardian) | Respondents |
____________________
Kate Burnell and John Chukwuemeka, instructed by Forbes Solicitors for the Mother
Nicola Miles, instructed by Marsden Rawthorn for the Father
Paul Hart, instructed by JWR Law for the Children's Guardian
Hearing dates 15-26 October 2012
Judgment date: 26 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Jackson:
Overview
A Specialist care
J has had the following care:
- Primary: her GP
- Secondary: her local hospital, under Dr O, since September 2004
- Tertiary: the leading regional hospital, under Dr C, since October 2006
- Quaternary: the leading national hospital, under Professor B, since January 2007.
B Hospital admissions
Between 2005 and 2011, in addition to countless routine hospital appointments
- J was admitted to hospital over 50 times, ranging from overnight to a three-month admission in April 2010.
- these admissions included 22 by ambulance, frequently at night.
C Medical examinations
J has been assessed or examined during planned reviews or emergency admissions by
- her GP
- a Paediatric Dietician
- a Consultant Paediatric Cardiologist
- a Consultant Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist
- a Consultant Paediatric Neurologist
- a Consultant Community Paediatrician (Dr O)
- a Clinical Psychologist
- a Consultant Ear, Nose & Throat Surgeon
- specialist Respiratory Nurses
- a Consultant in Paediatric Respiratory Medicine (Dr C)
- two further Consultants in Paediatric Respiratory Medicine at leading specialist hospitals
- a Professor in Paediatric Respirology (Professor B)
- a Consultant in Paediatric Intensive Care, Respiratory and Sleep Medicine (Dr H, providing an independent overview for these proceedings)
- many specialist Registrars locally and across the country
- numerous other doctors not listed above
D Intensive medical treatment
For her asthma, J's treatment progressed rapidly through the recognised stages of asthma treatment, in accordance with the British Guidelines on the Management of Asthma, and then beyond those guidelines. The following are prominent among the many drugs that she has been given:
- inhaled bronchodilators (Salbutomol)
- inhaled steroids (Seretide)
- oral steroids (Prednisolone)
- eventually, unlicensed drug treatments for a child of her age:
- Omalizumab (Xolair) by highly distressing monthly intramuscular injection
- Triamcinoline, an intramuscular steroid
- Methotrexate, an oral steroid to suppress her immune system
- Terbutaline (Bricanyl), delivered subcutaneously via an infusion pump visibly attached to the body for four months prior to her removal from the parents
For her reported desaturations, J had since 2006
- slept wearing a positive airway pressure face mask (BIPAP)
- slept with an oximeter (blood/oxygen level monitor) attached to her toe
- had a large oxygen concentrator at her bedside
E Tests
J has had
- sleep studies at three hospitals
- blood tests and sweat tests
- an echocardiogram, an ECG and a CT scan (whilst sedated)
- a barium swallow
- a bronchoscopy (under general anaesthetic)
- an ENT investigation, leading to removal of her adenoids
F Side effects
The physical risks from this escalating treatment were substantial. For example:
- Steroids can cause weight gain and change in facial appearance, slowing of growth, adrenal suppression, and in the long term high blood pressure and diabetes
- Methotraxate is used in chemotherapy. It carries the risk of nausea, severe infection, liver or renal damage, gastro-intestinal upset and suppression of bone marrow; it requires weekly hospital blood testing to check blood count
- General anaesthetics carry their own risks
Fortunately there is no evidence that J has suffered lasting physical side-effects, but it cannot be known that she has not been affected in some way in the longer term.
G Pain and suffering
J's overall treatment is described by Professor B as having been invasive and unpleasant. She was often extremely frightened and sometimes had to be held down. She developed needle phobia. The distress caused to J by the Xolair injections was such that the nursing staff became so concerned that they asked for the treatment to be discontinued, which it was.
H Emotional, psychological and social consequences
J has been profoundly affected by her experiences. Writing this year, an educational psychologist describes her as 'a youngster who is the product of her life's experiences which until very recently have been those of a child with a life threatening condition requiring considerable accommodation to her medical needs by J herself and all those in contact with her.' During each of her three years at Infant School her attendance record was just 55-60%. A child with no apparent learning difficulty, her spelling and reading is delayed by two years or more. Her social development has also suffered severely. She adopts an adult style of conversation, speaking with knowledge and fluency about her medical condition, which until recently has been a fixation for her. She does not relate well to other children, and has had no friends. Dr H described the amount of medical intervention as being comparable to that with a child with leukaemia. He said that J has had 'a very, very stressful life'.
The law
The hearing
Issues
(i) Did J suffer ALTEs and desaturations, and if so what was the explanation?(ii) What caused J's asthma to be so uncontrolled?
(i) J undoubtedly has asthma. The LA does not allege that the parents have fabricated or induced this condition.(ii) Although a theoretical cause of J's desaturations and ALTEs would be induced airway obstruction (suffocation or strangulation), there is no evidence whatever to support that possibility and the LA makes no such allegation in these proceedings. It plays no part in any consideration of the evidence or in future arrangements for J and MM.
ALTEs and desaturations
'I now wonder how severe these episodes really were. Perhaps something was occurring, mediated by a) J's extremely medicalised reaction, and b) M's extreme reaction – tired and stressed. A basis for the propagation of hypochondria. I don't have a basis for saying it was all fabricated; I cannot be sure how much was fire and how much was smoke.'
Asthma
(i) I reject their case that they were routinely giving J Seretide while J was asleep, a convoluted and inconvenient procedure.(ii) I do not accept that they genuinely believed that administration of Seretide to a sleeping child would be effective. Any reasonably competent parent would realise that this could not possibly be so, and M, as a nurse, would know that it was absurd. I do not accept that the parents learned to do it by watching nurses administer a different drug (Salbutomol) during sleep, or that they were encouraged or allowed to do so themselves; if that happened, it can have been on no more than an insignificant handful of occasions.
(iii) The fact that the parents never spoke to anyone about a practice of administering drugs to J in her sleep, even remaining silent when J's inhaler technique was being checked, makes it highly improbable that they were in fact doing it.
(iv) I accept the evidence of Dr C that both she and the nurses would repeatedly reinforce the need for good inhaler technique to M and that the parents knew that J needed a good dose of steroids every day.
(v) I do not accept that the parents genuinely thought J should be on one puff of Seretide twice a day, when she had been prescribed two puffs for more than two years. The fact that some letters and labels described the dosage in different ways did not in my view mislead the parents; they are now relying on it after the event. If there was any doubt about whether the parents know the correct dosage, it is firmly dispelled by Mrs H's evidence about her conversation with M on 10 November 2011.
(vi) M is unlikely to make careless mistakes about J's prescriptions. She was punctilious with the school about J's medication, and took a zero tolerance approach to any stepping out of line on their part.
(i) M understandably did not like the use of steroids.(ii) J did not like taking her medication, and the parents are both notably ready to defer to her.
Conclusions
(1) Faced with a possible conflict of interest in circumstances involving serious consequences, the preservation of a working relationship with parents cannot take precedence over the interests of the child.(2) The principle of diagnostic parsimony (c.f. Occam's Razor) proposes that simple explanations for medical conditions are exhausted before complex and unusual treatments are attempted.
(3) Fragmentation of responsibility between different hospitals carries the risk that the whole picture is not seen and understood by anyone – in J's case, no proper meeting was held until November 2011, and even that did not involve the LA.
(4) Where dilemmas of this kind arise, involving social as well as medical issues, doctors and schools should not be reluctant to call for a comprehensive assessment that can only be carried out by the ordinary child protection services.