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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 >> London Borough of Richmond v B & Ors [2010] EWHC 2903 (Fam) (12 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/2903.html Cite as: (2011) 118 BMLR 65, [2011] 1 FLR 1345, [2011] 1 FCR 401, [2011] Fam Law 131, [2010] EWHC 2903 (Fam) |
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MR JUSTICE MOYLAN
This judgment is being handed down in private on 12 November 2010. It consists of 14 pages and has been signed and dated by the judge. The judge hereby gives leave for it to be reported.
The judgment is being distributed on the strict understanding that in any report no person other than the advocates or the solicitors instructing them (and other persons identified by name in the judgment itself) may be identified by name or location and that in particular the anonymity of the children and the adult members of their family must be strictly preserved.
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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London Borough of Richmond |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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B 1st |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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W |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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B |
3rd Respondent |
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- and - |
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CB & CB (through their Children's Guardian) |
4th & 5th Respondents |
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Miss Jane Drew for the 1st Respondent
Mr George Butler for the 2nd Respondent
Miss Sorrel Dixon (instructed by Neirizi Swan) for the 3rd Respondent
Mr Richard Clough for the 4th & 5th Respondents
Miss Jacqui Gilliatt (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach) for the intervener, Trimega Laboratories Ltd
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Crown Copyright ©
MOYLAN J:
[3.1] An expert in family proceedings relating to children has an overriding duty to the court that takes precedence over any (other) obligation …"
[3.2] Among any other duties an expert may have, an expert shall have regard to the following duties:
(1) to assist the court in accordance with the overriding duty;(2) to provide advice to the court that conforms to the best practice of the expert's profession; …[3.3] The expert's report shall ….:
(8) in expressing an opinion to the court: …(b) describe their own professional risk assessment process and process of differential diagnosis, highlighting factual assumptions, deductions from factual assumptions, and any unusual, contradictory or inconsistent features of the case;(c) highlight whether a proposition is a hypothesis (in particular a controversial hypothesis) or an opinion in accordance with peer reviewed and tested technique, research and experience accepted as a consensus in the scientific community; …(9) where there is a range of opinion on any question to be answered by the expert:(a) summarise the range;(b) highlight and analyse within the range of opinion an 'unknown cause', whether on the facts of the case (for example, there is too little information to form a scientific opinion) or because of limited experience, lack of research, peer review or support in the field of expertise which the expert professes;(c) give reasons for an opinion expressed: the use of a balance sheet approach to the factors that support or undermine an opinion can be of great assistance to the court".
Hair Strand Testing for Alcohol Consumption
(i) When used, hair tests should be used only as part of the evidential picture. Of course, at the very high levels which can be found (multiples of the agreed cut off levels) such results might form a significant part of the evidential picture. Subject to this however, both Professor Pragst and Mr O'Sullivan agreed that "You cannot put everything on the hair test"; in other words that the tests should not be used to reach evidential conclusions by themselves in isolation of other evidence. I sensed considerable unease on the part of Professor Pragst at the prospect of the results of the tests being used, other than merely as one part of the evidence, to justify significant child care decisions;
(ii) Because of the respective strengths and weaknesses of each of the tests (for EtG and FAEEs), if hair tests are going to be undertaken, both tests should be used. Research has shown that the tests can produce conflicting results;
(iii) The results produced by the tests should be used only for the purposes of determining whether they are or are not consistent with excessive alcohol consumption by use of the cut off levels referred to in paragraph 20 above. If they are not – in other words if the concentration found is below the generally recognised cut-off levels – the results are consistent with (indicative of) abstinence/social drinking. If the results are above the generally recognised cut-off levels, they are consistent with (indicative of) excessive alcohol consumption. Further, as referred to earlier in this judgment, at these cut off levels the research evidence suggests that 10% of the results will be false positives. The tests cannot establish whether a person has been abstinent both because the non-detection of either EtG or FAEEs does not mean that the subject has not consumed alcohol and also because the detection of either at volumes below the cut off levels referred to above below does not mean that they have. Finally, on this point, the tests are not designed to establish abstinence or social drinking;
(iv) The current peer agreed cut off levels for both EtG and FAEEs are for the proximal 3 cm segment of hair. Whilst the testing of 1 cm segments (of the proximal 3 cm segment of hair) might have some value for the purpose of looking at trends (and also at very high levels referred to in (i) above), no cut off levels have been established or generally agreed for 1 cm segments nor, as referred to earlier in this judgment, is there sufficient published data on testing such segments to enable the validity of such tests to be established. Accordingly, any evidence based on the testing of 1 cm segments is unlikely to be sufficient to support conclusions as to the level of alcohol consumption;
(v) Notwithstanding what is set out in the Consensus, the witnesses in these proceedings agreed that, when tests demonstrate levels of EtG and FAEEs above the cut off levels referred to in paragraph 20, the results can be said to be "consistent" with excessive consumption over the relevant period. When a test demonstrates a lower level it is "consistent" with abstinence/social drinking.
(vi) As referred to in (iii) above, the current state of research means that there is no peer agreed cut off level for the line between abstinence and social drinking. In the absence of any such peer reviewed and agreed cut off, any court would, in my view, need specific justification before accepting any such evidence.
The Evidence
(a) "the cut off for EtG in hair strongly to suggest chronic excessive alcohol consumption is proposed at 30 pg/mg (0.03 ng/mg) scalp hair measured in the 0-3cm proximal segment";
(b) "the cut off for the sum of the four esters (FAEEs) in hair strongly to suggest chronic excessive alcohol consumption is proposed at 0.5 ng/mg (500 pg/mg) scalp hair measured in the 0-3cm proximal segment."
These recommendations reflect the current international consensus and are due to be reviewed in 2011. The proposed review reflects the fact that the science in this area is developing.
Hair Test Evidence in this Case
"The results are consistent with the use of alcohol by (the mother) within the time period covered by the most recent hair section analysed …
Based on the current scientific evidence, EtG results in isolation can be suggestive of alcohol use or abstinence however they may not be conclusive. Clinical judgment in combination with laboratory tests is therefore strongly recommended for the best diagnosis. The degree of any alcohol use is a clinical decision.
It is not possible to determine the amount of alcohol an individual has consumed from the level of EtG detected in any hair section tested. There are many factors that influence the amount of EtG in hair such as the strength of alcohol consumed, the effect of cosmetic hair treatments and individual variations in alcohol metabolism
For general guidance only, the level of EtG detected in the most recent hair section is in the low range in comparison with other samples analysed at the laboratory that have tested positive for EtG".
"The procedure looks for and quantifies several markers that indicate alcohol abuse. These markers are only present when the subject consumes alcohol.
The markers are derived from the effect of consumed alcohol on a range of fatty acids secreted by the body to produce a homologous series of fatty acid ethyl esters. These esters can only form from the consumption and are unaffected by the use of alcohol in shampoo, conditioners and treatment of any kind. The presence of these esters in the hair sample is evidence that the alcohol was ingested and absorbed by the body".
"Q: Does the EtG and FAEE concentration found in my client's test results equate to the quantity my client has consumed?
A: No. We cannot quantify the exact amount of units your client has been drinking as Trimega does not measure the alcohol itself but rather identifies and quantifies metabolites produced by the body once alcohol has ingested. Results cannot be quantified into consumption levels due to differences in alcohol metabolism and physiology in hair growth … As with all medically-based tests, results are not subject to the lineal laws of basic mathematics.
Q: If you cannot determine the quantity of alcohol consumed from the test results, what do these tests determine?
A: Trimega determine whether the donor falls above or below the cut off level that we have set, which is 60 grams of pure ethanol per day over a protracted period.
Q: What is meant by a "positive" result?
A: A positive result is reported when the total concentration of FAEE and/or EtG exceeds the cut off level which correlates to 60 grams plus on a daily basis.
Q: Would teetotallers return a "zero" result?
A: There is no such thing as a zero result because ethanol is present in all hair, even that of teetotallers. These traces are the product of the environment, the metabolism of certain foods and cosmetics."
• for EtG to be detected in any hair section analysed by TrichoTech, "it is estimated that the donor would have to consume, as a minimum, between approximately twenty and fifty units of alcohol per week over the course of the time period being tested";
• the result of the test on the mother's hair "is consistent with the use of alcohol"
• EtG results "in isolation can be suggestive of alcohol use or abstinence; however they may not be conclusive. Clinical judgment in combination with laboratory tests is therefore strongly recommended for the best diagnosis".
• the analytical cut-off for EtG is 0.01 ngs/mgs of hair.
He also enclosed the Consensus.
"The general view is that if ethyl glucuronide (EtG) is found in a hair strand sample, then the person has been drinking alcohol at a minimum of twenty units a week during the period tested. However, anecdotally there have been reports that low levels can be found in abstinent people".
She also refers to her understanding that EtG and FAEEs are produced following the consumption of alcohol and "as they are said to originate only from alcohol, then they are accepted as very specific markers". In addition, the Consultant makes the very sound point that all results need to be taken in the context of a particular case, including the history and other medical information.
"Experience shows that the manner in which experts express themselves at such meetings is less guarded than when they are writing reports for the court or giving oral evidence".
Conclusion