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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hemachandran & Anor v Thirumalesh & Anor [2024] EWCA Civ 896 (31 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/896.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 362, [2024] EWCA Civ 896 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF PROTECTION
Mrs Justice Roberts
COP 1405715T
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
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(1) THIRUMALESH CHELLAMAL HEMACHANDRAN (2) REVATHI MALESH THIRUMALESH |
Defendants/Appellants |
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- and – |
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(1) SUDIKSHA THIRUMALESH (DEC'D) (By her litigation friend, The Official Solicitor) (2) UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS BIRMINGHAM NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and – |
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MIND |
Intervener |
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Katie Gollop KC and Olivia Kirkbride (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the First Respondent
Vikram Sachdeva KC, Catherine Dobson and Isabella Buono (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Second Respondent
Alex Ruck Keene KC (Hons) and Neil Allen (instructed by MIND) for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 2-3 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice King:
Introduction
Background
Sudiksha's desire to receive experimental Nucleoside Therapy
Capacity to Decide on Medical Treatment
"The principles
(1) The following principles apply for the purposes of this Act.
(2) A person must be assumed to have capacity unless it is established that he lacks capacity.
(3) A person is not to be treated as unable to make a decision unless all practicable steps to help him to do so have been taken without success.
(4) A person is not to be treated as unable to make a decision merely because he makes an unwise decision.
(5) An act done, or decision made, under this Act for or on behalf of a person who lacks capacity must be done, or made, in his best interests.
(6) Before the act is done, or the decision is made, regard must be had to whether the purpose for which it is needed can be as effectively achieved in a way that is less restrictive of the person's rights and freedom of action."
"1. A capacitous individual is entitled to decide whether or not to accept medical treatment. The right to refuse treatment extends to declining treatment that would, if administered, save the life of the patient. In Re T (Adult: Refusal of Treatment) [1993] Fam 95 at 102 Lord Donaldson observed that:
"An adult patient who…suffers from no mental incapacity has an absolute right to choose whether to consent to medical treatment, to refuse it or to choose one rather than another of the treatments being offered… This right of choice is not limited to decisions which others might regard as sensible. It exists notwithstanding that the reasons for making the choice are rational, irrational, unknown or even non-existent."
2. This position reflects the value that society places on personal autonomy in matters of medical treatment and the very long established right of the patient to choose to accept or refuse medical treatment from his or her doctor (voluntas aegroti suprema lex). Over his or her own body and mind, the individual is sovereign (John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, 1859)".
"7. The temptation to base a judgment of a person's capacity upon whether they seem to have made a good or bad decision, and in particular on whether they have accepted or rejected medical advice, is absolutely to be avoided. That would be to put the cart before the horse or, expressed another way, to allow the tail of welfare to wag the dog of capacity. Any tendency in this direction risks infringing the rights of that group of persons who, though vulnerable, are capable of making their own decisions."
"[53] … the space between an unwise decision and one which an individual does not have capacity to take … for it is within that space that an individual's autonomy operates."
"(1) For the purposes of this Act, a person lacks capacity in relation to a matter if at the material time he is unable to make a decision for himself in relation to the matter because of an impairment of, or disturbance in the functioning of, the mind or brain." (My emphasis)
"(1) For the purposes of section 2, a person is unable to make a decision for himself if he is unable—
(a) to understand the information relevant to the decision,
(b) to retain that information,
(c) to use or weigh that information as part of the process of making the decision, or
(d) to communicate his decision (whether by talking, using sign language or any other means)."
i) Whether P is unable to make a decision for himself in relation to the matter [65]- [77] (section 3: the functional test).
ii) Whether that inability to make a decision is "because of" an impairment of, or disturbance in the functioning of, the mind or brain (section 2(1): the diagnostic or the mental impairment test):
"78. The second question looks to whether there is a clear causative nexus between P's inability to make a decision for himself in relation to the matter and an impairment of, or a disturbance in the functioning of, P's mind or brain."
"The correct formulation of "the matter" then leads to a requirement to identify "the information relevant to the decision" under section 3(1)(a) which includes information about the reasonably foreseeable consequences of deciding one way or another or of failing to make the decision: see section 3(4)."
"38. It is important to note that s3(1)(c) is engaged where a person is unable to use and weigh the relevant information as part of the process of making the decision. What is required is that the person is able to employ the relevant information in the decision making process and determine what weight to give it relative to other information required to make the decision. Where a court is satisfied that a person is able to use and weigh the relevant information, the weight to be attached to that information in the decision making process is a matter for the decision maker. …If P is unable to make the decision his or herself in relation to the matter then the court moves to the second question namely whether the inability is "because of" an impairment of, or a disturbance in the functioning of, P's mind or brain."
The role of 'Belief' in the functional test
"I consider helpful Dr Eastman's analysis of the decision-making process into three stages: first, comprehending and retaining treatment information, secondly, believing it and, thirdly, weighing it in the balance to arrive at choice."
"A person lacks capacity if some impairment or disturbance of mental functioning renders the person unable to make a decision whether to consent to or to refuse treatment. That inability to make a decision will occur when:
(a) the patient is unable to comprehend and retain the information which is material to the decision, especially as to the likely consequences of having or not having the treatment in question;
(b) the patient is unable to use the information and weigh it in the balance as part of the process of arriving at the decision. If, as Thorpe J observed in Re C … , a compulsive disorder or phobia from which the patient suffers stifles belief in the information presented to her, then the decision may not be a true one. As Lord Cockburn CJ put it in Banks v Goodfellow (1870) LR 5 QB 549, 569:
'… one object may be so forced upon the attention of the invalid as to shut out all others that might require consideration.'" (my emphasis)
"67. What is also clear, and again I need not cite authority in support, is that the general rule of English law, whatever the context, is that the test of capacity is the ability (whether or not one chooses to exercise it) to understand the nature and quality of the relevant transaction.
68. That puts the point at a very general level of abstraction. A more focussed test is to be found in Re MB (Medical Treatment) [1997] 2 FLR 426. But first I must go back to In re C (Adult: Refusal of Treatment) [1994] 1 WLR 290, where Thorpe J said this at page 295:
"I consider helpful Dr Eastman's analysis of the decision-making process into three stages: first, comprehending and retaining treatment information, secondly, believing it and, thirdly, weighing it in the balance to arrive at choice."
69. That was a case involving the question of capacity to consent to medical treatment. So too was Re MB (Medical Treatment) [1997] 2 FLR 426, where Butler-Sloss LJ at page 437 explained the test as follows……"
"81. Before I leave Re MB and section 3(1) of the Act, there is one other point to be made. It will have been noticed that in Re C Thorpe J identified, as the second of three ingredients of the test, the ability or capacity to "believe" the relevant information, whereas that ingredient is seemingly missing both from the formulation of the test in Re MB and from section 3(1) of the Act. The answer to this seeming lack of correspondence between the tests in Re C and Re MB was provided by Mr Joseph O'Brien on behalf of KM. It is to be found towards the end of the passage which I quoted above from Butler-Sloss LJ's judgment in Re MB. If one does not "believe" a particular piece of information then one does not, in truth, "comprehend" or "understand" it, nor can it be said that one is able to "use" or "weigh" it. In other words, the specific requirement of belief is subsumed in the more general requirements of understanding and of ability to use and weigh information." (my emphasis)
Munby J concluded:
"To summarise: i) Re MB (Medical Treatment) [1997] 2 FLR 426 sets out the test where the question is whether someone has capacity to consent to medical treatment."
"61. Second, XB lacks the capacity to make the decision about the need to take the antihypertensive medication. XB understands what hypertension is and the serious consequences if left untreated. However, he continues to refuse treatment because he does not believe that he suffers from hypertension. He considers staff are lying to him about his diagnosis in order to damage or control him. As a result of his mental ill health he is unable to use or weigh up the information about the benefits and risks of taking or not taking the medication, as he does not believe he suffers from the condition being treated."
"Where there is objectively verifiable medical consensus as to the consequences of not having medical treatment, if a person does not believe or accept that information to be true, it may be that they are unable to understand it and/or unable to weigh it for the purposes of the MCA."
"37. The central provisions of the MCA 2005 have been widely welcomed as an example of plain and clear statutory language. I would therefore deprecate any attempt to add any embellishment or gloss to the statutory wording unless to do so is plainly necessary."
The Psychiatric Evidence and Clinical Evidence
Dr Bagchi:
Dr Mynors-Wallis:
"i) the particularly distressing and pervasive nature of her physical health problems and the impact this must have had on her mind.
ii) The impact of a prolonged stay on ICU.
iii) Sudiksha's refusal and great distress when being asked by me to participate in an ongoing evaluation of her wishes and feelings.
iv) Sudiksha's agitation when being asked by Dr Bagchi about her physical condition.
v) Sudiksha's fixed beliefs about not trusting ward doctors and her fixed decision and refusal to discuss anything with me indicates, in my opinion, an inability for flexible decision making and to hold in her mind competing ideas."
The Judgment
"6. [Sudiksha] is well aware that she has been offered a very poor prognosis by her doctors. She acknowledges that they have told her that she will die but she does not believe them. She points to her recovery from previous life-threatening episodes whilst she has been a patient at the intensive care unit. She believes she has the resilience and strength to stay alive for long enough to undergo treatment abroad and she wishes the court to acknowledge her right to make that decision for herself."
"17. The court must therefore address two specific questions in order to determine the issue of capacity in this case. First, is [Sudiksha] unable to make decisions for herself in relation to ….(b) her current and future medical treatment including the level of medical intervention going forward; the stage at which that medical intervention should be reduced or withdrawn; and whether to embark on a trial of nucleoside therapy, if it becomes available to her in circumstances where there are no available or reliable predictors of outcome? Second, if she is unable to make decisions in either domain, does that inability arise because of an impairment of, or a disturbance in the functioning of, her mind or brain?
"18. In the context of the first question as it applies in the context of current and future medical treatment, and before turning to consider the detail of the medical evidence before the court, I consider that the broad parameters of the relevant information includes an understanding or appreciation of (i) the nature of her disease; (ii) the assessment of her treating clinicians in relation to prognosis; (iii) the options available in terms of active treatment going forward including the likelihood of such treatment being available to her and its chances of success; (iv) the reasonably foreseeable consequences for her of withdrawing active treatment and moving towards a path of palliative care; and (v) the reasonably foreseeable consequences of continuing with current medical interventions in the context of the possibility of further pain, anxiety and distress generally and in the event of further unexpected medical events."
"He said that he did not regard the basis of those beliefs as completely irrational. The fact that enquiries had been made of three potential providers of experimental treatment who had asked for further information was evidence that there was a rational basis for a belief that treatment might be available, albeit that such treatment was untried and untested. Dr [Mynors-Wallis] had formed a view that in circumstances where the three most important people in [Sudiksha's] life were clinging to the same hope, it was understandable that she should also focus on this "light in the tunnel" even if that light was extremely dim. Further in circumstances where Dr [Tunnicliffe] had expressed the prognosis for [Sudiksha] in an earlier statement as one where she had only "hours or days" to live, and where [Sudiksha] had confounded those expectations, he did not consider that her beliefs could be seen as delusional.
56. In response to questions put to him by Mr Sachdeva KC on behalf of the Trust, Dr [Mynors-Wallis] said that, whilst wrong in her false belief that nucleoside therapy will bring any improvement in her current condition, it is an understandable belief which derives significant support from the beliefs held by her family members. He viewed her decision that she did not want to abandon active treatment as a capacitous decision. When cross-examined by Mr Garrido KC, he confirmed that the entire body of medical opinion available to the court supports his belief that she does not have a realistic appreciation of the likely outcome of treatment and he concurs with that opinion. That is the basis of his view that she fails the functional test for capacity".
"Her beliefs are such that she does not understand her illness sufficiently to make a capacitous decision as to whether to go down a palliative path [of care], but that is not the result of any impairment of mind or disturbance of the brain. Rather it is a belief which she shares with her family. So within the meaning of the Act, I believe she has capacity. …. What she does not have is an understanding of the inevitability of a decline and that her hopes will not be fulfilled."
"78. In terms of the functional test of capacity, a person's ability to understand, use and weigh information as part of the process of making a decision depends on him or her believing that the information provided for these purposes is reliable and true. That proposition is grounded in objective logic and supported by case law in the context of both the common law and the interpretation of MCA 2005." (my emphasis)
"84. …What she fails to understand, or acknowledge, is the precariousness of her current prognosis. She does not believe that her doctors are giving her true or reliable information when they tell her that she may have only days or weeks to live. She refuses to contemplate that this information may be true or a reliable prognosis because she has confounded their expectations in the past despite two acute life-threatening episodes in July this year and because she has an overwhelming desire to survive, whatever that may take".
"86. Because she clings to hope that her doctors are wrong, she has approached decisions in relation to her future medical treatment on the basis that any available form of treatment is a better option than palliative care which is likely to result in an early death as active treatment is withdrawn. In my judgment she has not been able to weigh these alternatives on an informed basis because (a) she does not believe what her doctors are telling her about the trajectory of her disease and her likely life expectancy, and (b) she does not fully comprehend or understand what may be involved in pursuing the alternative option of experimental nucleoside treatment. Whilst I accept that she recognises that it may not be successful in terms of the outcome which she wishes to achieve, she has failed to factor into her decision-making that there are, as yet, no concrete funded offers of treatment, far less offers which might offer her even the smallest prospect of a successful outcome."
"93. In my judgment the answer to the first question posed in JB (above) is that [Sudiksha] is unable to make a decision for herself in relation to her future medical treatment, including the proposed move to palliative care, because she does not believe the information she has been given by her doctors. Absent that belief, she cannot use or weigh that information as part of the process of making the decision. This is a very different position from the act of making an unwise, but otherwise capacitous, decision. An unwise decision involves the juxtaposition of both an objective overview of the wisdom of a decision to act one way or another and the subjective reasons informing that person's decision to elect to take a particular course. However unwise, the decision must nevertheless involve that essential understanding of the information and the use, weighing and balancing of the information in order to reach a decision. In [Sudiksha's] case, an essential element of the process of decision-making is missing because she is unable to use or weigh information which has been shown to be both reliable and true."
"95.…In my judgment she refuses to contemplate when her death may occur because she has invested all her remaining physical, emotional and spiritual energy in staying alive and pursuing the option of alternative treatments. She cannot contemplate that her doctors may be right in their assessment of her prognosis because she does not recognise or believe that her progressive respiratory failure is a symptomatic manifestation of the course of the disease and she has managed to survive to this point in time despite their attempts to persuade her that she is dying."
"98. As to the nature of the impairment of, or disturbance in the functioning of, the mind or brain which prevents [Sudiksha] from understanding, using and weighing the information which she has been given, it is accepted that [Sudiksha] does not suffer from any recognised psychiatric or psychological illness. Dr Mynors-Wallis struggled to identify precisely how to 'label' [Sudiksha's] condition. His evidence was that her beliefs, which he accepted to be false, did not amount to a delusion because there was an understandable basis for her views which derived from, or coincided with, the views held by those she loved and trusted. His concern about making the causal nexus between a lack of ability to make a decision and the impairment in question was that none of the treating clinicians had identified a physical problem in her brain or that her recent respiratory arrests had affected her the functioning of her brain. That much is agreed." (my emphasis)
"103. In my judgment, and based upon the evidence which is now before the court, I find on the balance of probabilities that [Sudiksha's] complete inability to accept the medical reality of her position, or to contemplate the possibility that her doctors may be giving her accurate information, is likely to be the result of an impairment of, or a disturbance in the functioning of, her mind or brain. Her vulnerability has been acknowledged by [Dr Mynors-Wallis]. I need no persuading that she has been adversely impacted by the trauma of her initial admission to hospital. That trauma is likely to have been exacerbated by the length of her stay in the ITU unit. Her brother acknowledges that she has been surrounded by patients dying around her on the unit as the months have gone by. Whilst she has been sustained by the near continuous presence of her mother and, to a lesser extent, the other members of her close family, she has endured almost a year of intensive medical and surgical intervention which has been both painful and distressing for her. She is frightened by the prospect of dying and clings to her desire to survive what her doctors have repeatedly told her is an unsurvivable condition. The cumulative effect of her circumstances over such a prolonged period, her profound inability to contemplate the reality of her prognosis, and a fundamentally illogical or irrational refusal to contemplate an alternative are all likely to have contributed to impaired functioning notwithstanding the resilience which [Sudiksha] has displayed in her determination to carry on fighting. It is not necessary for me to seek to further define the nature of that impairment. I am satisfied that it exists and that it operates so as to render her unable to make a decision for herself in relation to her future medical treatment.
104.… It is not simply the failure to believe the advice she is receiving and thus her inability to understand, use and weigh information in the decision-making process which informs the finding of impairment. It is informed by a holistic evidence-based overview of [Sudiksha's] lived experience on the ITU and the trauma she has suffered as a result of the intensive treatment she has required over the past twelve months. That trauma has manifested itself in acute episodes of distress and anxiety and a presentation which suggests a hyper-vigilant state where she is continuously watching for her mother and requiring her constant support on an almost daily basis."
The Grounds of Appeal
"Ground 1: By departing from the clear and unequivocal conclusions of the two court-appointed psychiatric experts whilst failing, contrary to the requirement laid out by the Court of Appeal in AB v BG & Ors [2009] EWCA Civ 10, to: (i) base this departure on material upon which a disagreement could be founded; (ii) give adequate reasons for this departure."
Ground 2: By treating the opinion of the non-expert clinical witnesses as being to all intents and purposes equivalent to that of the experts.
Ground 3: By holding, contrary to the Court of Appeal in Re D (Children) [2015] EWCA Civ 749, that the diagnostic test in MCA 2005 did not require as a matter of necessity the professional diagnosis of an impairment of the mind.
Ground 4: By premising its assessment of capacity on substantively accepting disputed, untested opinion evidence about [Sudiksha's] physical condition, prognosis and treatment options which had been expressly excluded from the scope of the hearing.
Ground 5: By adopting an approach which placed the functional test of capacity before the diagnostic test contrary to the requirements of the MCA Code of Practice and thereby failing to comply with s. 42(5) MCA.
Ground 6: By finding that a lack of belief in a diagnosis or prognosis may amount to a lack of understanding for the purposes of s.3(1) MCA health and welfare decision-making in circumstances where there was a rational basis for the lack of belief."
"39. Finally, whilst the evidence of psychiatrists is likely to be determinative of the issue of whether there is an impairment of the mind for the purposes of s 2(1) , the decision as to capacity is a judgment for the court to make (see Re SB [2013] EWHC 1417 (COP) ). In PH v A Local Authority [2011] EWHC 1704 (COP) Baker J observed as follows at [16]:
'In assessing the question of capacity, the court must consider all the relevant evidence. Clearly, the opinion of an independently-instructed expert will be likely to be of very considerable importance, but in many cases the evidence of other clinicians and professionals who have experience of treating and working with P will be just as important and in some cases more important. In assessing that evidence, the court must be aware of the difficulties which may arise as a result of the close professional relationship between the clinicians treating, and the key professionals working with, P.'"
i) Ground 3: professional diagnosis of an impairment of the mind:
Re D (Children) [2015] EWCA Civ 749 did not, as implied in this ground, say that a professional diagnosis of an impairment of mind is required before it can be said to have been established. In Re D at [30], I simply said that the diagnostic test will require evidence from a suitably qualified person, which will usually be a person with medical qualifications. This was said in the context of a case where it was agreed that the person in question suffered from significant learning difficulties. In case there is any room for misunderstanding, I make it absolutely clear that I endorse the approach of MacDonald J in North Bristol that no formal diagnosis of impairment is required.
ii) Ground 4: evidence of Sudiksha's condition, prognosis and treatment options:
The judge heard and accepted the evidence of Dr Tunnicliffe who was the principal clinical lead whose evidence was tested in cross-examination. The judge had the advantage of extensive medical evidence from a number of differing disciplines, often accompanied by independent second opinions. That Sudiksha was in the terminal stage of her illness was undoubtedly the case. What was not being considered at the hearing was what further treatment would or would not be in her best interests. That was an issue which, had she lived long enough for a court to have considered it, would no doubt have been the subject of challenge by the clinicians.
iii) Ground 5: Application of Re JB to the present case:
Mr Quintavalle submitted that the test in JB did not apply because in JB, unlike the present case, there was no doubt that the patient concerned had an impairment of mind and the issue there was as to whether, notwithstanding that impairment, the patient could consent to treatment. Mr Quintavalle drew the attention of the Court to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 Code of Practice ("the Code") which stipulates the two-stage test of capacity, the first stage (at 4.11) being to establish whether someone has an impairment i.e. the diagnostic test. In this context he draws the attention of the court to section 42(5) MCA which requires the Court to "take into account" the Code.
Responding to this submission, Mr Sachdeva rightly drew the Court's attention to Lawson, Mottram and Hopton, Re(Appointment of personal welfare deputies) [2019] EWCOP 22; [2019] 1 WLR 5164 at [16] which makes it clear that it is the wording of the statute as authoritatively interpreted by the Court which must prevail over the Code. In my judgment, this and indeed any court, is in any event, bound by the Supreme Court decision in JB namely that questions under section 2(1) MCA should be first as to whether P is unable to make a decision for themselves by reference to section 3(1), the functional test. If they are not so able, consideration is given at the second stage to whether that inability is because of an impairment of, or a disturbance in, the functioning of the mind or brain (section 2(1), the mental impairment test).
I should say for completeness sake, that the Code with which the Court is concerned was first published in 2007. A consultation ran between March and July 2022 in relation to the proposed updating and revision of the Code. The Consultation said that the Code was to be revised because: "the existing Code guidance needs updating in light of new legislation and case law, organisational and terminological changes, and developments in ways of working and good practice". The draft new Code, dated June 2022, adopts the JB approach to assessment of capacity at chapter 4.
Conclusion and Outcome
Lord Justice Singh:
Lord Justice Baker: