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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Leggett v Norfolk, Suffolk & Cambridgshire Strategic Health Authority [2006] EWHC 1238 (QB) (26 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/1238.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1238 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Claimant Defendant |
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B e f o r e :
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Alistair John Leggett (By his mother and next friend Deborah Ann Green) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Norfolk, Suffolk & Cambridgshire Strategic Health Authority |
Defendant |
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Mr David PittawayQ.C. and Mr Alex Hutton for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25,26,27,28 April and 2 May 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Eccles Q.C.:
Introduction
Bilirubin
The issues
i. What were the serum bilirubin levels at the material times when it was being monitored?
ii. What were the bilirubin levels known to the nursing and medical practitioners at those times, if different from the above?
iii. If the staff were not fully aware of the levels of bilirubin, what other readings should have been taken and when should the results have been passed on?
iv. Was the kernicterus sustained by Alistair a classic form of kernicterus (or something close to it), or was it a "low bilirubin kernicterus"?
v. Were there steps that the hospital staff could have taken to prevent the occurrence of kernicterus and, if so, were either the nursing or medical or laboratory staff negligent in failing to take those steps?
vi. If there was a duty to intervene, having regard to what was or should have been known about Alistair's serum bilirubin levels at the material time, would such intervention probably have prevented the occurrence of kernicterus?
The history
i. There is an untimed entry on the Neonatal Data Flow Sheet with a reading of 267 for total serum bilirubin.
ii. There a nursing note made by Nurse Mann at the shift change at 12.30 to 1.00 p.m. that "SBR remains ? 267: phototherapy continued".
iii. There is an untimed laboratory analysis of split bilirubin, with a measurement of 266 for unconjugated bilirubin and 55 for conjugated, a total of 321.
iv. There as an untimed post-operation reading of 272 for total bilirubin.
The witnesses
Bilirubin levels.
i. At what time was the blood sample taken that produced the ward serum bilirubin level of 267?
ii. At what time was the sample taken that produced the post-operative level of 272?
iii. At what time was the split result sent to the ward?
The law
"In the realm of diagnosis and treatment there is ample scope for genuine difference of opinion, and one man clearly is not negligent merely because his conclusion differs from that of other professional men, nor because he has displayed less skill or knowledge than others would have shown. The true test for establishing negligence in diagnosis or treatment on the part of a doctor is whether he has been proved to be guilty of such failure as no doctor of ordinary skill would be guilty of if acting with ordinary care." |
"If that statement of the true test is qualified by the words "in all the circumstances", counsel for the plaintiff would not seek to say that that expression of opinion does not accord with English law. It is just a question of expression. I myself would prefer to put it this way: A doctor is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art. I do not think there is much difference in sense. It is just a different way of expressing the same thought. Putting it the other way round, a doctor is not negligent, if he is acting in accordance with such a practice, merely because there is a body of opinion that takes a contrary view. At the same time, that does not mean that a medical man can obstinately and pig-headedly carry on with some old technique if it has been proved to be contrary to what is really substantially the whole of informed medical opinion. Otherwise you might get men today saying: "I don't believe in anaesthetics. I don't believe in antiseptics. I am going to continue to do my surgery in the way it was done in the eighteenth century". That clearly would be wrong."
It is not enough to show that there is a body of competent professional opinion which considers that theirs was a wrong decision, if there also exists a body of professional opinion, equally competent, which supports the decision as reasonable in the circumstances. It is not enough to show that subsequent events show that the operation need never have been performed, if at the time the decision to operate was taken it was reasonable in the sense that a responsible body of medical opinion would have accepted it as proper…."
" I would only add that a doctor who professes to exercise a special skill must exercise the ordinary skill of his speciality. Differences of opinion and practice exist, and will always exist, in the medical as in other professions. There is seldom any one answer exclusive of all others to problems of professional judgment. A court may prefer one body of opinion to the other, but that is no basis for a conclusion of negligence."
"Again, in the passage which I have cited from Maynard's case [1984] 1 W.L.R. 634, 639, Lord Scarman refers to a "respectable" body of professional opinion. The use of these adjectives - responsible, reasonable and respectable - all show that the court has to be satisfied that the exponents of the body of opinion relied upon can demonstrate that such opinion has a logical basis. In particular in cases involving, as they so often do, the weighing of risks against benefits, the judge before accepting a body of opinion as being responsible, reasonable or respectable, will need to be satisfied that, in forming their views, the experts have directed their minds to the question of comparative risks and benefits and have reached a defensible conclusion on the matter."
"I adopt the analysis of Hobhouse L.J. in Joyce v. Merton, Sutton and Wandsworth Health Authority [1996] 7 Med.L.R. 1. In commenting on the decision of the Court of Appeal in the present case, he said, at p. 20:
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture] | "Thus a plaintiff can discharge the burden of proof on causation by satisfying the court either that the relevant person would in fact have taken the requisite action (although she would not have been at fault if she had not) or that the proper discharge of the relevant person's duty towards the plaintiff required that she take that action. The former alternative calls for no explanation since it is simply the factual proof of the causative effect of the original fault. The latter is slightly more sophisticated: it involves the factual situation that the original fault did not itself cause the injury but that this was because there would have been some further fault on the part of the defendants; the plaintiff proves his case by proving that his injuries would have been avoided if proper care had continued to be taken. In the Bolitho case the plaintiff had to prove that the continuing exercise of proper care would have resulted in his being intubated." |
There were, therefore, two questions for the judge to decide on causation. (1) What would Dr. Horn have done, or authorised to be done, if she had attended Patrick? And (2) if she would not have intubated, would that have been negligent? The Bolam test has no relevance to the first of those questions but is central to the second."
Was there a breach of duty based on the serum bilirubin level of 267?
i. During the night of the 18th/19th March Alistair's serum bilirubin was raised from 213 to 267. The fact that phototherapy was clearly not working was itself a cause for serious concern and mandated immediate action.
ii. A serum bilirubin reading of 280 in the case of a baby of Alistair's age and condition would have mandated an exchange transfusion.
iii. The rate at which Alistair's bilirubin rose over the night in question was indicative of pathological jaundice, a condition more dangerous than the physiological jaundice common in babies from which they will almost invariably recover uneventfully.
iv. Although 267 was not in the zone where an exchange transfusion had to be organised immediately, there was a foreseeable risk that it would soon go into that zone and therefore blood should have been ordered in anticipation of the likely need to transfuse.
v. By the time the blood arrived, an exchange transfusion would have been necessary, and should have been carried out.
Should the split bilirubin reading of 321 mmols/l have been sent to the ward and, if so, when?
What duty was owed by the medical staff when the 321 reading was received?
a. Another routine ward serum bilirubin test would have been carried out using part of the sample taken through the arterial line at 11.30 a.m. (see the "Gasses and Vents" chart). Given the coincidence of the time when the 321 should have gone to the ward and the time when blood was in fact taken for routine testing, I assume that the doctor on the ward would not have insisted on another arterial sample being taken at 11.30 a.m. or thereabouts if he or she had just received the 321 result.
b. The doctor receiving the 321 result would have ordered another ward serum test at some later time.
i. Was a ward serum bilirubin test in fact done at 1.00 p.m.?
ii. If so, what was the likely reading?
iii. If there was a test, and the result showed a rise, was it ignored by the nurses and doctors?
iv. If no reading was taken, what would it have shown and what duties would then have arisen?
v. If no reading was taken, was there a breach of duty?
Did the serum bilirubin continue to rise after 7.30 a.m.?
Causation
a. For the 18th March he relied on a nursing note that during the night of the 18th/19th March Alistair was "very intolerant of handling and restless at times"
b. For the 19th March he relied on a note that by10.45 a.m. Alistair was noted to be having "slightly abnormal jerking movements".
Conclusion