BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> PC, Re [2024] EWCA Civ 895 (31 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/895.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 895 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM the Court of Protection sitting in the High Court
Mr Justice Cusworth
14034582
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
RE: PC |
____________________
Rhys Hadden (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the 1st Respondent
Claire Watson KC (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: 18 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King:
Background
The Clinical Medical evidence and assessments
"I would like to emphasise that the vast majority of her behaviours, as have been clinically possible for her to ascertain when under my care, were negative, distressing and intolerable when compared with the narrative I had from family and friends of this young, vibrant and hopeful person."
"Repeated and frequent behaviours associated with pain or distress:
Facial grimacing and frowning
Moaning and crying".
Professor Wade's evidence on awareness and pain:
"…Although pain may cause her to grimace or react, these changes are probably automatic and not indicative of actual pain…… In practice, I think that she is very unlikely to be experiencing pain. However, it is notable that her observed behaviours are generally associated with pain and no behaviours associated with pleasure or happiness have been reported."
"These additional assessments:
a) Confirm that here has been no significant change over the last three years, with possibly a small decline in her initial scores.
b) Show a low level of responsiveness.
c) Show no evidence of significant awareness or ability to discriminate between stimuli.
The observed responses were often those associated with pain in people who are aware, such as grimacing and frowning."
"5.16 Nevertheless, it seems likely that the experience of pain is dependent upon a widespread neural network throughout the brain, often referred to as pain matrix. Consciousness and awareness arise from a neural network of similar extent, and neurological damage that impairs consciousness must almost certainly impair pain perception and awareness.
5.17 On the other hand, because pain is arguably a more basic phenomenon that consciousness, the pain matrix may be more resistant to degradation.
5.18 She is unlikely to be conscious of pain, but we should not discount the possibility."
"5.32 it causes considerable distress to the nursing care team and family members who do not visit because it is distressing. Moreover as I discuss, although it is very unlikely that she has any meaningful experience of pain, it absolutely cannot be excluded and must be considered within her management."
"6.17 Nevertheless, given the difficulty in stating categorically that the pain behaviours do not indicate a low level of pain experience that may be forgotten instantly but nevertheless felt, one should at least consider the pain behaviours as part of the information needed to make a decision."
"g) last but not least, she exhibits frequent pain behaviours, which can be reduced using painkilling and sedating drugs, and although it seems unlikely that she is experiencing pain as a person, if she does have any experience at any level, it will be predominantly one of pain and distress."
"…We have no convincing evidence that an unconscious person cannot experience pain. We have plausible, if not compelling, reasons for thinking that, at some fundamental level, they might experience pain. A person not a brain, feels pain, and the absence of brain networks or their activation cannot prove the absence of pain. Although they may not remember past pain or anticipate future pain, this does not reduce the suffering at the time."
Assessments and the PDOC Guidance
Assessments
i) A statement from Dr B.
ii) A supplementary report from Professor Wade following a further assessment addressing:
a) Whether there had been any material change in PC's condition or presentation;
b) Whether there was value in further investigations of PC's condition; and
c) PC's awareness in particular by reference to Dr A's statement that PC is "sometimes alert".
iii) PC's medical records for the preceding 3 months and all formal clinical assessments/evaluations undertaken in accordance with the PDOC Guidance.
(my emphasis)
The PDOC Guidance
"In this rapidly changing field the recommendations are likely to need updating as new evidence emerges and as international consensus develops. In the meantime, we have aimed to provide a practical and useful source of advice for clinicians who work with this complex group of patients."
"Patients in permanent VS/MCS no longer require formal review by specialist PDOC assessor, although it is good practice to conduct a brief annual follow up …."
"As part of the assessment when making decisions about the potential withdrawal of active medical treatment (specifically CANH)"……..
"Assessment should be undertaken by a clinical team with specific training skills and experience in the evaluation of patients with PDOC. Formal standard evaluation should be performed under appropriate conditions with particular attention given to those given to those listed in Table 2.2."
(Table 2.2 sets out the conditions for assessing the level of consciousness by reference to such issues as the environment, posture of the patient, fatigue etc.)
" 45. Professor Wade also denied that there was any serious prospect of misdiagnosis in this case, and explained that previous statistics which suggested high rates of misdiagnosis were explained by the hard lines between levels of consciousness that were previously drawn before the best interests test was adopted. Asked whether the evaluations of PC that had been carried out were inadequate, he commented that the initial 2020 assessments had been appropriately thorough, and that subsequent assessments need only confirm that there had been no discernible shift in her condition. He rejected any suggestion that the assessments carried out had been inadequate, and pointed out that whilst more intensive tests were appropriate in the early stages after a brain injury, these were no longer required 4 years after the injury has been sustained. He commented that recommendations in papers from the United States had to be seen in the context of a much quicker likely assessment of condition being carried out in that jurisdiction. And further that recovery after traumatic brain injury was much more often seen than after a hypoxic injury such as that suffered by PC."
The Judgment
a. PC has suffered a global hypoxic brain injury which affects all parts of her brain;
b. PC is in PDOC and has been assessed to be at the lower end of the spectrum of awareness (MCS-);
c. PC is able to breathe independently but is unable to eat or drink and can therefore only receive nutrition and hydration by way of CANH;
d. She is immobile and unable to communicate her needs in any way;
e. She is also doubly incontinent and requires 24 hour nursing care which includes personal care such as washing, dressing and changing her continence pad;
f. As a consequence of her brain injury, PC has developed contractures and suffers from spasms, which will not improve and are likely to worsen over time;
g. PC has a history of chest infections, infection of the skin and urinary tract infections. As a consequence of her immobility and inability to manage secretions and the need for a PEG and suprapubic catheter, PC remains at risk of developing infections in the future;
h. PC displays pain behaviours characterised by facial grimacing, moaning and crying;
i. PC's condition may fluctuate from day to day but there will be no sustained improvement in her clinical state.
"42. … described still making up his mind about the experiencing of pain when minimally conscious - he expected that there was some sensation, but couldn't gauge its extent. He also accepted that if able to experience pain, PC would also be capable of experiencing pleasure."
"The only element of medical uncertainty was, as explained, the question of whether PC was capable of experiencing the pain and discomfort which her outward expressions seem to manifest with some regularity, and which expressions then respond to treatment with morphine or anti-depressants. No amount of further assessment would serve to answer that question, and such assessment would therefore have served no useful purpose. Further, there was no evidence available or suggested which indicated any real prospect that PC may be functioning at a higher level than all of the previous assessments had indicated. Another series of assessments was not therefore necessary, as all of the medical witnesses agreed. Professor Wade went as far as to express the view that it would be a 'waste of time'."
"57. ……It is striking that there have been no observations of any comfort or pleasure reactions in her, and that the staff at the RHN have been themselves upset by the distress that her daily life can cause her. Whilst her suffering can evidently be alleviated by increasing doses of morphine, or anti-depressants to control her night-time crying, this increasing sedation as a substitute for some remote consciousness afflicted by unknowable pain and discomfort appears to offer little upside for her. The prospect that there may be elements of consciousness left to her of course strikes deep with her family. However, it is unavoidable that there is simply no evidence that PC's experiences offer her any positives. There is no evidence of any enjoyment of life. The only evidence is of her exhibiting discomfort and pain.
58. I do bear in mind that there is no need for PC to receive any especially burdensome treatments. It is however sad to note that just the everyday functions of caring for her are seen to cause her distress by the nursing staff, which distress is only partially masked by medication. I accept Mr Lawson's point that for much of the time in the medical notes, PC is recorded as being 'stable', but that appears for the most part to be stability generated by sedation, and not equivalent to any element of comfort."
"62…I cannot avoid the conclusion that her life has not since 2020 and will not going forward be one that affords her any measurable degree of pleasure or even contentment. Further years of life may be of value to anyone, however disabled, if they are able to derive some positives from their existence. Very sadly, the only evidence that I have of PC's condition and mood, when not sufficiently regulated by medication, is of discomfort and the experience of pain. Those who care for her are clearly worried for her. Her family look to her reactions as signs of consciousness, but what they describe does not amount to more than the appearance of suffering. It is very clear to me from all that I have read and heard that the burden of her condition on PC is a heavy one."
The Grounds of Appeal
Ground 1: The decision not to adjourn to obtain expert medical evidence was unfair in circumstances where the only evidence was from a second opinion doctor who fundamentally reversed his opinion on the key point in the case (PC's experience of her life) while giving evidence.
Ground 2: The Court conducted its own assessment of PC's experience of pleasure, contrary to authority.
Ground 3: Failing to determine the relevance of "covert consciousness" to the assessment of people in a persistent disorder of consciousness.
Ground 4: It was an error, and contrary to authority, to decide that it was appropriate to cease treatment for someone with a low burden of care and no expressed wishes not to have care. That decision failed to pay lawful respect to the sanctity of life and PC's right to life.
Discussion and Analysis:
Ground 1: The application to adjourn
Ground 4: A compelling reason for the Court to hear an appeal.
"36. The courts have been most reluctant to lay down general principles which might guide the decision. Every patient, and every case, is different and must be decided on its own facts. As Hedley J wisely put it at first instance in Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust v Wyatt [2005] 1 FLR 21, "The infinite variety of the human condition never ceases to surprise and it is that fact that defeats any attempt to be more precise in a definition of best interests" (para 23). There are cases, such as Bland, where there is no balancing exercise to be conducted. There are cases, where death is in any event imminent, where the factors weighing in the balance will be different from those where life may continue for some time."
Outcome
Lord Justice Baker:
Lord Justice Bean: