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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> D v South Tyneside Health Care NHS Trust [2003] EWCA Civ 878 (11 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/878.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 878 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE DISTRICT REGISTRY
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE FAULKS)
Quayside Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 3LA |
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B e f o r e :
(Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers)
LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE WARD
____________________
D. C. D | ||
(A PATIENT BY HER LITIGATION FRIEND AND MOTHER P. D) | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
SOUTH TYNESIDE HEALTH CARE NHS TRUST | Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR DE-NAVARRO QC AND MR J FREEDMAN (instructed by Ward Hadaway, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 3DX appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This was a difficult case that called for a close analysis of the factual and expert evidence and the relationship between them, particularly the Bolitho test. It is not apparent, from the Judge's brief statement of preference for the defence expert evidence and his equally brief consideration of just one of the factual issues at pages 12 and 13 respectively of his judgment, that he has undertaken that analysis or properly applied the Bolitho test to the facts as he found them."
Relevant Provisions of the Mental Health Act 1983.
COMPULSORY ADMISSION TO HOSPITAL AND GUARDIANSHIP
Admission for assessment
(1) A patient may be admitted to a hospital and detained there for the period allowed by subsection (4) below in pursuance of an application.... made in accordance with subsections (2) and (3) below.
(2) An application for admission for assessment may be made in respect of a patient on the grounds that-
(a) he is suffering from mental disorder of a nature or degree which warrants the detention of the patient in a hospital for assessment (or for assessment followed by medical treatment) for at least a limited period; and
(b) he ought to be so detained in the interests of his own health or safety or with a view to the protection of other persons.
....
3 Admission for treatment
(1) A patient may be admitted to a hospital and detained there for the period allowed by the following provisions of this Act in pursuance of an application (in this Act referred to as 'an application for admission for treatment') made in accordance with this section.
(2) An application for admission for treatment may be made in respect of a patient on the grounds that-
(a) he is suffering from mental illness, severe mental impairment, psychopathic disorder or mental impairment and his mental disorder is of a nature or degree which makes it appropriate for him to receive medical treatment in a hospital; and
(b) in the case of psychopathic disorder or mental impairment, such treatment is likely to alleviate or prevent a deterioration of his condition; and
(c) it is necessary for the health or safety of the patient or for the protection of other persons that he should receive such treatment and it cannot be provided unless he is detained under this section.
....
17 Leave of absence from hospital
(1) The responsible medical officer may grant to any patient who is for the time being liable to be detained in a hospital under this Part of this Act leave to be absent from the hospital subject to such conditions (if any) as that officer considers necessary in the interests of the patient or for the protection of other persons.
(2) Leave of absence may be granted to a patient under this section either indefinitely or on specified occasions or for any specified period; and where leave is so granted for a specified period, that period may be extended by further leave granted in the absence of the patient.
....
18 Return and readmission of patients absent without leave.
(1) Where a patient who is for the time being liable to be detained under this Part of this Act in a hospital-
(a) absents himself from the hospital without leave granted under section 17 above; or
(b) fails to return to the hospital on any occasion on which, or at the expiration of any period for which, leave of absence was granted to him under that section, or upon being recalled under that section; or
(c) absents himself without permission from any place where he is required to reside in accordance with conditions imposed on the grant of leave of absence under that section,
he may, subject to the provisions of this section, be taken into custody and returned to the hospital or place by any approved social worker, by any officer on the staff of the hospital, by any constable, or by any person authorised in writing by the managers of the hospital."
The Absconsion Policy
"Procedures to be initiated immediately
.....
Patients will be identified as absent without leave when they cannot be accounted for by ward staff and/or at the time of prescribed observation checks.
The nurse in charge of the ward must be informed immediately of patient's absence.
The nurse in charge will be responsible for implementing the following procedures:
• deploying staff to conduct a search of:
• the ward
• the entire unit, including courtyards
• the immediate vicinity of the grounds surrounding Bede.
If patient is not located the nurse in charge of the ward will inform:
• nurse manager or designated deputy, who will offer advice and deploy additional staff, as appropriate. Out of hours the nurse co-ordinator for mental health directorate will be advised, who should ensure that the nurse manager is advised as soon as possible. Where the absconding patient is considered to be at significant risk the nurse manager on call should be informed and additional advice sought on action to be taken.
• Nearest relative/carer informed immediately, advising them to contact staff if patient returns home if they have any relevant information regarding the patient's whereabouts. Where the patient remains absent daily contact should be maintained with the relatives and support/information provided where appropriate.
• The Responsible Medical Officer (RMO) and seek advice on further management of situation.
• Security via Ingham reception (Out of hours the hospital alert should be initiated).
• The patient's general practitioner.
• The key worker.
Consideration should be given to:
• The current risk assessment/management plan for the patient.
• Any recent incidents/occurrences/
relationship problems which may be relevant.
• Any known haunts frequented by patient.
• Diagnosis (higher incidence of risk in patients with a predominant diagnosis of schizophrenia/affective disorder).
• Gender.
• Age.
....
Legally detained patients
Section 18 Mental Health Act 1983 provides powers for the return of patients who are absent from leave.
A patient who is liable to be detained in hospital may be taken into custody and returned to hospital by the following (section 18(2))
any Approved Social Worker
any officer on the staff of the hospital
any constable
any person authorised in writing by the hospital managers.
Otherwise the responsibility for the safe return of the patient rests with the detaining hospital.
....
Police Involvement.
Calls on the police should be kept to a minimum, but police should always be informed at once of the escape or absence without leave of a patient who is considered dangerous or who is subject to restriction on discharge under part III of the Mental Health Act.
Police constables are among the people authorised to retake patients who are absent without leave from the hospital where they are liable to be detained, from the place where they are required under guardianship to reside (section MHA), who escape while being conveyed from one place to another or who escape from a place of safety or custody under the act (section 138).
There may be cases where police assistance is required in the retaking of patients who are considered to be at risk of harming themselves or others."
The Background Facts
"She has increased agitation and hostile over the recent weeks. She has been argumentative as well as violent to people. She has been expressing paranoid ideas. She lacks insight. She refuses to accept medication and enter hospital informally. She is at risk to herself and to others by her disturbed behaviour."
"At present she is extremely agitated, aggressive, has pressure of speech, expresses paranoia. Lacks full insight in her condition and shows unpredictable behaviour. In view of her present history and present mental state she needs assessment in hospital."
Events after Miss D's final admission
"Extremely agitated paranoid -- talking about mother trying to melt her brain. Episodes of shouting for no reason. Mother is very concerned as her mood is very labile as she is laughing at times inappropriately and talking to herself."
"She has consistently refused to co-operate with treatment plan. Recently had been in hospital for a period of observation but because of lack of cooperation -- and partly because she settled a little -- treatment was not forced onto her. But she is obviously deteriorating -- so needs treatment."
"PROBLEM -- D. has been admitted to hospital under sec 3 MHA, there is a possibility that she may abscond.
GOAL -- For Dawn to remain safe in the ward environment.
INTERVENTIONS
(1) D. states at present time has decided to remain on the unit therefore nominal observation only.
(2) All staff to observe D.'s mood and behaviour and document changes.
(3) Staff to encourage D. to accept prescribed medication.
(4) Named associate nurse to explain rights under sec 3 MHA."
The issues
"There is no doubt that D. should have been in hospital, and had she been the chances of her injuring herself would have been much reduced. I therefore take the view that since the Defendants were responsible for the care of D., who was mentally ill and was supposed to be detained in the hospital, the fact that she was out doing injury to herself raises on the face of it, without other explanation, a case of negligence against the Defendants, and for that proposition I rely on the authority of Cassidy v The Ministry of Health [1951] QB 434. Put another way, the burden of disproving negligence in a case of this sort lies on the Defendants."
The first issue
"Dr Roy, the psychiatrist in charge of D.'s case, believed, as he put it, in negotiation not confrontation with patients such as D.. He took the view that if the patient is to be cured in the long term, or at least have their condition balanced, that that required the consent or the willingness of the patient to take his or her medication. Therefore he was against confronting such people, preferring to persuade them to take medication voluntarily."
"The claimant's case relies on the evidence of Dr Rix, a most distinguished psychiatrist, who has been a consultant forensic psychiatrist since 1997, and that of Peter McGuinness, a distinguished psychiatric nursing expert. Both those men conclude that, bearing in mind the history and presentation of D., she was subject to an observation regime which was inappropriately low. They believe that observations should have been at no more than fifteen minute intervals and that accordingly the hospital's care of D. was negligent.
The defence case was supported by Dr Wood, another distinguished psychiatrist, albeit that he has not worked in the National Health Service for ten years and before that worked as a forensic psychiatrist; also by David Duffy, another distinguished psychiatric nursing expert, whose speciality is in the nursing of patients with suicidal tendencies. Mr Duffy was about as qualified as a nursing expert could be, in as much as he not only works hands on for six months of the year with mentally ill patients but he also has a number of publications on the subject of mental health and nursing to his name as well as a chapter in the standard nursing text book.
Both those experts called by the Defence believe that there was nothing in D.'s history or presentation which necessitated any higher level of observation on September the 2nd 1996 than once an hour. So, those are the two rival contentions by the experts."
"Dr Rix and Mr McGuinness point out that D. was obviously extremely ill on August 29; that that is followed by the crisis on August 30 which led to her forcible injection; on the following day she walks out of hospital, having been told not to; then on September 1 she rows with her mother. The picture, they say, is of an unpredictable woman in the grip of an episode of schizoid disorder and a woman who is liable to be a danger to others as well as to herself. Accordingly, they say, she required close observation, among other reasons to prevent absconding. In the light of her past history of absconding, they say, that she would abscond at lunchtime on September 2, having been refused leave at that moment, was entirely predictable."
"Dr Wood and Mr Duffy, on the other hand, take the view that in the four days following her admission on August 29 D. had made progress in taking at least some of her medication. They approve of Dr Roy's policy of negotiation rather than confrontation for the long-term good of the patient and her taking at least some medication was a considerable improvement on her previous admission when, as I have said, she took no medication.
On the morning of September 2, D. again did accept some of her medication. She was described as being pleasant and co-operative all morning, and so Dr Wood described her condition as being a mild hypomanic illness. There was no specific indication of suicide nor any specific indication that she might do harm to others. He and Mr Duffy both point out that in their view the only way to prevent D. absconding would have been by constant or one-to-one observation which was not justified by the risk D. presented, and in any event close observation had antagonised D. in the past and so would undermine the policy of getting D. to willingly take her medication and willingly stay in hospital. Another matter those experts say has to be factored into the risk assessment was that D. had been absent from the unit on no less than thirteen occasions between July 29 and September 2 and had come to no harm. Finally, Mr Duffy made the point that there is in fact no professional consensus about the length of intervals between observations to be used in different circumstances with mentally ill patients, and he said that in different hospitals many different approaches were used."
"I listened to both those experts being cross-examined by Mr Wilby. Neither expert yielded in his view, and that was a view which seemed to me to be logically defensible.
....
I am therefore satisfied on the evidence of Dr Wood and Mr Duffy, that there is a responsible body of medical men who would have done as Dr Roy did, and in those circumstances I cannot find that the hospital were negligent."
Q. "Are you saying that come Monday morning, that is 72 plus hours afterwards, she should still have had a nurse visiting, she spent Monday morning most of the time in her room, nurses should have been coming visiting every 15 minutes?
A. Yes because otherwise they are not going to know where she is, they're not going to know whether she is in the room.
Q. You see I suggest that it was not..., that sort of level of observation was not indicated but even if the view you express is sustainable you would concede that others would say well that is intrusive and probably unhelpful?
A. It is a case of making balances to what the ultimate good is.
Q. Exactly. And I wanted you to use the word balance because that is what this is all about isn't it. It is a balance between on the one hand therapeutic care and on the other a restrictive regime keeping her on the ward?
A. Yes.
Q. And if those who were treating her and those who were looking after her felt that 15 minute observations were going to have an adverse effect, it was not unreasonable of them was it for them to elect for hourly observations?
A. Well, I would have wanted to be there to discuss that. A decision like that would in a case like this where you are so concerned about the unpredictability, a discussion with the doctors and the nurses together. I wouldn't have expected that decision to be made by the nurses on their own."
Q. "It comes to this, Mr McGinnis, that what this inconsistency reinforces is that there is no right or wrong answer as to what is the correct level of observation, is there?
A. There is no national consensus about how observations should be used or how they should not, I know from hospital enquiries that I have been asked to carry out that there has been very different approaches to observation. There is a stronger view about using when constant is used, and when maybe intermittent, there is less about the lower range.
.... the issue is that there is not a national consensus, there is not a national standard set, there is just a national standard in terms of well patients should be observed and engaged, but there is nothing saying well these are the conditions in which 15 minute observations should occur. It isn't that, it is down to individual trusts who decide."
"Confrontation will first of all lead to mistrust, she will not trust, she will become angry, and compliance will be even worse. On the other hand, negotiation and discussion will help to ensure that she will get some medication, and she is likely to continue with it if you do it with negotiation, rather than challenging all the time. It is a matter of building the trust."
"It strikes me as a perfectly reasonable approach, in that the long-term goal is very much to engage the patient in her own treatment in a cooperative fashion for her own welfare, and a policy of pure confrontation would overcome the immediate acute symptoms but not achieve the sort of drug treatment plan that you would be looking for."
"First of all, I don't think leaving the observations where they were is unreasonable. I think a reasonable body of opinion would have left them at that level. And secondly, I don't think instituting 15 minute observations would have prevented D.D. from absconding, the choice was clearly that of one-to-one nursing, or removal to a secure environment, which was likely to undermine any benefit of the softly-softly negotiated approach that Dr Roy was trying to achieve."
"As we have heard from the nursing staff and others, the way to try to achieve compliance in the case of this patient, was to negotiate with her and was to try to build a therapeutic relationship with her to persuade her to take her medication, and all I can imagine is regular 15 minute checks around the clock for several days would have had the exact opposite effect, and intended to make her less willing to comply."
He later added:
"The priority for this patient was to get her to comply with medication. I will come back to that point. I mean something happened that has cast a long shadow of hindsight over things, I appreciate that, but the priority was getting this patient to take some medication, and to be imaginative in trying to find ways of getting her to do so."
Conclusions
"The natural history of bipolar affective disorder is of severe mood disturbance, sometimes depression, sometimes hypomania or mania, with the type of depression associated carries a particular raised risk of suicide, and often when a patient is profoundly depressed they preempt contact with doctors by completing suicide. Because it is a lifelong condition, and it continues to recur in many cases, despite treatment, the risk of suicide continues over many years. Which is why the end result for this percentage of patients, and it used to be said about 10 per cent, but I accept 5 to 10 per cent occurs, where that is the end result, despite all our treatment."
The Absconsion Policy
Would the police have got there in time?
Order: Appeal dismissed. Taxation of appellant's Legal Services Commission costs