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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Care Standards Tribunal >> PHH v Secretary of State for Education and Skills [2006] EWCST 876(PVA) (01 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCST/2007/876(PVA).html Cite as: [2006] EWCST 876(PVA) |
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PHH v Secretary of State for Education and Skills [2006] EWCST 876(PVA) (01 October 2007)
PHH (Appellant)
-v-
Secretary of State for Education and Skills (Respondent)
[2006] 876.PVA
[2006] 1132.PC
Before:
Miss H Clarke (Nominated Chairman)
Mr M Flynn
Dr E Walsh –Heggie
Heard on September 3rd, 4th and 5th 2007 at Lincoln Magistrates Court, Lincoln, Lincolnshire
For the Appellant:
Mr M Mullins of Counsel instructed by McKinnells, solicitors.
For the Respondent:
Mr A Ruck-Keane of Counsel instructed by Treasury Solicitor.
The Tribunal has concluded that the order under Regulation 18(1) should continue so that details of the Appellant, the staff and residents at the residential home and the other witnesses have been anonymised in order to protect the private life of the parties in accordance with Regulation 27.
(i) Mrs B, the registered proprietor of a residential care home in Lincoln (BH).
(ii) Ms C, who ran a management consultancy business (CFL)
(iii) Dr T a local GP who had originally provided a witness statement in support of the Appellant's Appeal. The Respondent then applied to the President for a Third Party Disclosure Order, which was granted on June 13th 2007 requiring Dr T to provide all GP medical notes and records relating to Mrs F (who was a resident at BH) from June 2004 onwards to the date of her death. Dr T attended the hearing and gave evidence to the tribunal.
(iv) The Appellant also gave oral evidence.
(i) A Synopsis of the opening submissions by Counsel for the Appellant.
(ii) A summary of the notes and medical records relating to Mrs F prepared by Counsel for the Appellant.
(ii) Further copies of the medication administration records (the MAR sheets) for Mrs F.
(iv) A note of the closing submissions prepared by Counsel for the Respondent
(v) During the evidence of Mrs B a procedural point arose concerning a reference to a report which was prepared on June 29th 2005, which had not been disclosed to the Appellant prior to the hearing. It was agreed that the notes of the meeting of the 29th would be formally excluded from these proceedings by agreement of both the parties as they related to matters which would not progress the Appeal and in the circumstances it was specifically agreed that they should be excluded.
.
"if on an Appeal or determination under this section the Tribunal is not satisfied of either of the following, namely:-
(a) that the individual is guilty of misconduct (whether or not in the course of his duty) which harmed or placed at risk of harm a vulnerable adult; and
(b) that the individual is unsuitable to work with vulnerable adults, the Tribunal
shall allow the Appeal or determine the issue in the individual's favour and (in either case) direct his removal from the list; otherwise it shall dismiss the Appeal or direct the individual's inclusion in the list."
BH is a residential home in Lincoln registered for 30 residents requiring residential care. Mrs B has been the owner of BH for approximately 30 years and is the registered proprietor of the care home business operated at BH .The Appellant began working at BH in June 1986 as a care assistant and subsequently became a senior care worker. The Appellant obtained a number of training qualifications including NVQ level 3 in Care: the Boots Pharmacy Care of Medicines Training Foundation Course certificate, and the ASET Certificate in the safe handling of medicines.
The Appellant usually worked two consecutive day shifts from 8 am to 8 pm at BH and then had the following two days off ,another senior carer (usually AO) worked on the days when the Appellant was not working.
After the Appellant had left BH, staff discovered that she had not signed the MAR sheets when she had dispensed the medicines that morning to the residents.
The Appellant brought an action through the Employment Tribunal proceedings for unfair dismissal but later withdrew the application when the parties agreed a financial settlement.
Ms B also reported the Appellant to the local inspector of the Commission for Social Care and Inspection (CSCI) and as a result of a further investigation the Appellant was placed on the POVA and POCA list.
(i) Failure by the Appellant to administer medication to Mrs F in accordance with her prescription between 18th January 2005 and 16th March 2005 and
(ii) Failure to complete the drugs record sheets on 23rd June 2005, and that this did not represent an isolated incident but was part of a pattern of behaviour by the Appellant.
Dr T confirmed that he had attended residents at BH for approximately 20 years and he also confirmed that he had worked with the Appellant during that time. Dr T stated in his oral evidence that he had become Mrs F's doctor when she was registered with his GP practice when she was admitted to BH in 2004. Dr T considered that Mrs F had received good care during her stay in BH.
Dr T was questioned in detail about his prescribing methods and in particular whether he considered it appropriate for care workers to exercise discretion whether to give drugs to residents notwithstanding that the prescription details stated that medication should be given on a daily or regular basis. Dr T confirmed that notwithstanding what was on the MAR sheet or prescription he considered that experienced care workers could and did exercise discretion concerning whether or not a specific dose of medicine should be given.
Dr T stated that if Mrs F was calm and quiet "I wouldn't wake her up to give her Haloperidol which would make her sleepier." Dr T considered that Mrs F had not suffered any harm during the period between January and June 2005 and that her husband had been happy with her care at BH. Dr T described Mrs F as a very frail lady suffering vascular dementia and in physical decline.
Dr T stated that if a patient was drowsy or sleepy or unsettled, and the purpose of the medicine was to calm the patient it was not necessary to always give the medicine. He also stated that if the staff at the care home were exercising discretion it was not necessary to notify the doctor unless there had been a significant change in the resident's condition. "If a carer thinks a patient is too drowsy she can take her own decision because of her experience".
Under cross examination Dr T stated that he would not have expected necessarily to be consulted by the care home if the medication was not being taken providing the patient was quiet and happy.
Following the incident on June 23rd 2005 Ms C had a meeting with the Appellant On June 27th which in her written evidence (Tribunal Bundle Page 428 Para 5) she describes as counselling but in her oral evidence she also referred to coaching the Appellant. When asked by the Tribunal Ms C was unable to distinguish whether she was actually giving coaching or counselling to the Appellant. Ms C confirmed that following the meeting with the Appellant on June 27th 2005 she had subsequently taken notes at the Appellant's disciplinary meeting on July 6th 2005.
Dr Z (a partner in the same GP practice as Dr T) had been asked to visit Mrs F on June 22nd 2005 because she was in an agitated state; he reviewed her medication and increased the dosage of Promazine and Haloperidol for Mrs F and specifically wrote on the medication notes that it should be given on a regular basis.
Mrs B accepted that she knew when the Appellant left BH that Mrs F had not received her medication that morning.
The Appellant described how she would decide whether to exercise her discretion to omit a dose of Haloperidol of Promazine for Mrs F and stated that she would assess Mrs F's condition; if she was asleep she would not wake her up nor would she give her the medication if she was alert and calm. The Appellant believed that Dr T trusted her to make decisions about Mrs F's medication.
The Appellant was questioned about the information contained on the MAR sheets for Mrs F in particular, her failure to administer the drugs between February 13th 2005 and March 16th 2005 in accordance with the prescription on the MAR sheet ( Tribunal Bundle page 286) which specified that both Promazine and Haloperidol were to be given twice a day. The Appellant accepted that she should try to give the drugs twice a day but she confirmed that she would not give the drugs if Mrs F was asleep, ill or if she appeared bright and alert.
The Appellant considered that Mrs B had spoken to her in a different, unusual way which had surprised her and that she felt that she was under a verbal attack. The Appellant stated that Mrs B had agreed to her request for one hour's "time out" and that the Appellant had returned one hour 5 minutes later because she felt it was the correct thing to do.
Counsel for the Respondent submitted that there was clear evidence that the Appellant had regularly failed to comply with the prescription for Haloperidol that was in place between 18th January 2005 and 16th March 2005 and the prescription for Promazine that was in place between February 12th 2005 and March 16th 2005 as stated on the February MAR sheet. The Respondent submitted that the Appellant should have been aware that the regular failure to medicate was incorrect.
It was submitted by the Respondent that the Appellant's decision to contact Dr T in March 2005 to request a change to the prescription supports the submission that the Appellant was aware that the way she was delivering the drug regime prescribed for Mrs F between January and March was not correct or consistent with the prescription and that this conduct constitutes misconduct.
It was submitted by the Respondent that without a contemporaneously completed drug record sheet there was no way in which other staff members would know what medication had been administered to the residents.
It was conceded by the Respondent that no actual harm had been suffered to Mrs F as a result of the failure by the Appellant to complete the MAR sheets at the time the medication was administered but the Respondent submitted that there was still a clear risk of harm to the residents of BH if the MAR sheets were not signed contemporaneously.
The Respondent submitted that the comments indicate that the Appellant has demonstrated that she is willing to place weight on her own judgment as to the administration of medication above that of the prescribing doctor and that she lacks the ability to recognise when she has overstepped the appropriate level of discretion.
Counsel for the Appellant submitted that the improvements to Mrs F's condition after June 2005 could not be automatically linked to the Appellant's behaviour in March and that the BH records for Mrs F indicated that improvements to Mrs F's health could have been due to other physical medical conditions, in particular for instance her constipation, had been resolved.
H.
Counsel for the Appellant submitted that the Appellant had been open and honest with the Tribunal and had volunteered information to the effect that she had on some other occasions under extreme pressure failed to sign the MAR sheets when the drugs had been administered, but had done so later.
As there was no documentary evidence to verify any previous occasions when the MAR sheet had been signed late, Counsel for the Appellant submitted that the Appellant's frank admission demonstrated her inherent honesty and integrity. Counsel for the Appellant submitted that there was no evidence of a regular pattern of behaviour of delaying or failing to sign the sheets nor was there any evidence or risk of harm to Mrs. F.
Findings
Dr T was open and direct in his evidence and readily admitted that he could well have had a conversation with the Appellant on March 18th 2005 and that the absence of any record of the conversation in his notes did not mean that the conversation had not taken place. The Tribunal accepts that a telephone conversation did take place on March 18th 2005 between Dr T and the Appellant and that the written entry in the BH records on that day is correct (Tribunal Bundle page 300).
The Tribunal finds that there was no attempt to conceal individual decisions by care workers to omit the administration of any of the drugs to Mrs F or to falsify the records.
The Tribunal finds that the methods for recording changes to the prescription drugs and for verification of those changes with pharmacies who supplied the drugs was at times inadequate and did not always accurately reflect what was being administered to Mrs F by the staff at BH.
The Tribunal finds that the Appellant did not sign the MAR sheet before leaving the premises but that she did verbally notify other members of BH staff about what drugs had been administered to the residents.
Conclusions
The allegations of misconduct in this case focus on the failure by the Appellant to administer drugs to Mrs F in accordance with the prescriptions listed on the MAR sheets for Mrs F and the failure to sign the MAR sheets for BH on June 23rd 2005, and that the Appellant's failure to sign the MAR sheets was not an isolated incident.
It is a noticeable feature of this appeal that Dr T and the proprietor of the home Mrs B, the Appellant and the other senior carer AO had known each other for many years. A degree of trust and mutual respect had developed between Dr T and the senior care workers at BH who he considered to be conscientious and hard working. As a result of this respect and perhaps familiarity over a number of years Dr T had become accustomed to delegating discretion concerning medication of the residents to the care staff at BH. Dr T considered that it was the care workers who had 24 hour experience seven days a week with the residents and they were best equipped to assess the resident's needs on a day to day basis.
"If a carer thinks the patient is too drowsy she can take her own decision because of her experience, because more in contact with them"
The Tribunal noted the comment in the written statement of Mrs B (the Tribunal Bundle page 433 para 8) stating that the Appellant "was very resistent to C and M's involvement and did not see why it was necessary. Her attitude was that she did not see what all the fuss was about."
The Appellant has admitted that she failed to sign the records on June 23rd 2005 before she left BH for one hour but she said that she told the other care workers that all the residents except Mrs F had received their medicines.
Decision:
The Appeals are allowed.
It is the unanimous decision of this Tribunal that both the appeals be allowed and the Tribunal directs that the Appellant's name should be removed from the POCA and POVA lists.
Miss H Clarke (Nominated Chairman)
Mr M Flynn
Dr E Walsh – Heggie
Dated October 1st 2007