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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 >> An NHS Foundation Trust v AB & Ors [2020] EWHC 3221 (Fam) (21 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/3221.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 3221 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AN NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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(1) AB (by her Child's Guardian) (2) CD (3) EF |
Respondents |
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Mr Christopher Osborne (instructed by Cafcass) for the First Respondent
The Second and Third Respondents were unrepresented
Hearing dates: 21 October 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
Background
"[AB] also told me that she walks home of an evening with her dad and her younger brother but would be very scared to cross any roads on her own. [AB] told me that she enjoys going swimming with the school and also with her family. When I asked if she helps out with jobs at home, [AB] told me that she sometimes cuts fruit in the kitchen with help from her mum, 'mum keeps an eye on her', and that in the past she's accidentally cut her fingers on more than one occasion when she's cut vegetables with a sharp knife. She also told me that she has accidentally cut her hands on sharp edges at home but not told her family for fear of worrying them. I emphasised the importance of telling her parents when things like that happen and [AB] agreed that she should have told somebody. [AB] was able to explain her vision quite effectively. She told me that she sees better to the left than the right side but can't see to the sides as well as she can to the front. When I asked what kind of light conditions were easiest and most difficult, [AB] told me that bright sunlight was quite difficult and relative darkness quite early on in the morning was also difficult to see in, moderate light was best. [AB] showed me how she cups her hands around her eyes to cut out glare, something I observed her doing when we were outside with her friends. When we went into a small intervention room, [AB] fell to the floor missing where she thought a sofa was, the sofa covered part of the wall silhouetted by a bright window behind it. [AB] told me that she often bumps into people and furniture in class. Today I also conducted an informal test of [AB's] visual field (confrontation test). [AB's] fields of vision appear to be significantly reduced, [AB] did not appear to be able to perceive objects beyond approximately 45 degrees from the central point of her vision in any direction. However, a more formal test would certainly be necessary to establish actual visual field perception."
The Law
"What is involved is not merely an ability to understand the nature of the proposed treatment … but a full understanding and appreciation of the consequences both of the treatment in terms of intended and possible side effects and, equally important, the anticipated consequences of a failure to treat."
"1. As a dispute has arisen between the treating doctors and the parents and one, and now both parties have 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 judgement.
2. The right and power of the court to do so only arises because the patient in this case, because he is a child, lacks the capacity to make a decision for himself.
3. I am not deciding what decision I might make for myself if I was hypothetically in the situation of the patient nor for a child of my own if in that situation nor whether the respective decisions of the doctor on the one hand or the parents on the other are reasonable decisions.
4. The matter must be decided by an application of an objective approach or test.
5. That test is in the best interests of the patient, best interests are used in the widest sense and include every kind of consideration capable of impacting on the decision. These include non-exhaustively medical, emotional, sensory, pleasure, pain and suffering and instinctive, the human instinct to survive considerations.
6. It is impossible to weigh such considerations mathematically but the court must do the best it can to balance all the conflicting considerations in a particular case and see where the final balance of the interests lie.
7. and 8. go specifically to life-saving treatments and are not relevant here.
9. All these cases are very fact-specific, i.e. they depend entirely upon the facts of the individual case.
10. The views and opinions of both doctors and parents must be carefully considered. Whereas in this case, the parents spend a great deal of time with their child, their views may have a value because they know the patient and how he reacts so well although the court needs to be mindful that the views of any parents may be understandably coloured by their own emotions or sentiment. It is important to stress that the references to the views and opinions of the parents their own wishes, however understandable in human terms, are wholly irrelevant to the consideration of the objective best interests of the child save to the extent in any given case they may illuminate the quality and value to the child of the child parent relationship."
"There can be no doubt in my mind that the evaluation of best interests is akin to a welfare appraisal. The speeches in Re F (Mental Patient: Sterilisation) [1990] AC 1 read in their context can only bear this interpretation: see particularly the speech of Lord Goff at 77D-G. Subsequently the Law Commission in their 1995 report on mental incapacity recommended an extensive evaluation of best interests: see paragraph 3.28. The latest statement of government policy in Making Decisions shows that the government currently accepts the Law Commission's recommendation: see paragraph 1.10. Pending the enactment of a check list or other statutory direction it seems to me that the first instance judge with the responsibility to make an evaluation of the best interests of a claimant lacking capacity should draw up a balance sheet. The first entry should be of any factor or factors of actual benefit. In the present case the instance would be the acquisition of fool proof contraception. Then on the other sheet the judge should write any counterbalancing dis-benefits to the applicant. An obvious instance in this case would be the apprehension, the risk and the discomfort inherent in the operation. Then the judge should enter on each sheet the potential gains and losses in each instance making some estimate of the extent of the possibility that the gain or loss might accrue. At the end of that exercise the judge should be better placed to strike a balance between the sum of the certain and possible gains against the sum of the certain and possible losses. Obviously only if the account is in relatively significant credit will the judge conclude that the application is likely to advance the best interests of the claimant."
Conclusions
Delay