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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 >> EQ, Re [2016] EWHC 3418 (Fam) (14 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2016/3418.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3418 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
(In Private)
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF : | ||
Re: EQ |
____________________
MS. G. MELLON appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
MS. G. HONEYMAN appeared on behalf of CAFCASS.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR. JUSTICE FRANCIS:
"My mum was told that I should have surgery immediately and she was given a number of statistics advising that the earlier surgery was carried out the better. She went along with this and I had the operation at around one week old. I developed a number of the conditions that EQ is at risk of developing and I am therefore in a strong position to understand not only the conditions themselves, but the effect that these are likely to have on EQ's life, freedom and independence."
"Because I do not have the protection of a lens on my eyes, I cannot go outside in cold or windy weather. If I get an eyelash or debris in my eye, I cannot get it out and have to wait for it to come out naturally. It can take around three days for an eyelash to come out of my eye and I can describe that pain as being as painful as labour. I do not want my daughter to go through this."
Those are powerful statements indeed and I do not think that anybody would want EQ to go through those sufferings either.
"I asked the mother whether she would consent to surgery and allow EQ to have an anaesthetic if it could be guaranteed that there would be no complications. I stressed that we cannot ever promise this. [The mother] and her mother said that they understood this. [The mother] gave this considerable thought and said that she would probably give consent if it could be guaranteed that there would be no complications."
In other words, the mother would like EQ, in a perfect world, to have sight. There is no doubt at all, as I have said, that the mother's view is greatly affected, as one must recognise and respect, by her own life experiences.
"Taking into account the above [various matters that she had set out] and in relation to EQ, if the operations were to take place on 12th and 15th December, as proposed [it would now be 15th and something like 20th December, but I did not understand her to be saying the test today would be different by the delay of three days], I consider that she has a 66% chance of achieving an outcome of 6/18 - that is half of normal vision by the age of six years."
She described what "half of normal vision" meant in a way that we, as lay people, would understand, which is "It would mean that you would be able to see half of the optician's chart and half of the optician's chart is a very considerable amount of sight indeed". She went on to say there is a 10% chance of EQ developing glaucoma and a 70% chance of strabismus (that is a squint) by the age of six years.
i. "As a dispute has arisen between the treating doctors and the parents, and one…[party has] asked the court to make a decision, it is the role and duty of the court to do so and to exercise its own independent and objective judgment."
I make it absolutely clear that I am not in any sense when I give my decision imposing my opinion. I am exercising, as I am obliged to do as a Judge in this court, my independent and objective judgment based on the evidence that I have as to what is in EQ's best interests.
ii. The right and power of the court to do so only arises because EQ lacks the capacity to make a decision for herself because, of course, she is a tiny baby.
iii. The matter must be decided, as I have said, by applying an objective approach. That is the best interests of EQ.
iv. Used in the widest sense and to include every kind of consideration capable of impacting on the decision and these include medical, emotional, sensory and instinctive considerations.
v. I also bear in mind very much in this case the effect which it will have on the mother and her family if EQ does have this operation. Whatever the medics say, the fact is that this mother will worry about EQ if the operation goes ahead and she will do so because of her own life experience. Therefore, I am bound to take into account the effect that it will have on her as a mother. Whilst I have described her, correctly in my judgment, as apparently an excellent mother, she will find mothering more difficult if she is worrying all of the time about the possibility that EQ may develop difficulties following surgery. Against that, I take into account that I am sure that this is a mother who would be very pleased if she found that EQ has the gift of sight.
vi. It is impossible to weigh these considerations mathematically. I have to do the best balancing exercise that I can working out where the final balance of interests lie.
I am not concerned with point vii of Mr. Justice Holman's points because that was a case about the prolongation of life, where mercifully we are not dealing with such an issue here. That applies also to point viii of his ten points.
ix. Mr. Justice Holman says that all these cases are very fact specific. They depend entirely on the facts of the individual case. My failure at what is now 17.55pm to set out all of the facts that have been put before me does not mean that I have not had them at the front of my consideration. I have taken into account all of the facts that have been put before me.
x. I have taken into account the views and opinions of the doctors and of the mother and, in turn, of the maternal grandmother. I have considered those carefully. This is not a question of it being the wishes of the mother, it is the opinions of the mother and they bear heavily on my judgment.