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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 >> Lay v Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust & Anor [2013] EWHC 436 (QB) (08 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/436.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 436 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
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MICHELLE LAY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CAMBRIDGESHIRE AND PETERBOROUGH MENTAL HEALTH PARTNERSHIP NHS TRUST - and - MR A. SHAIR |
Defendant Third Party |
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Martin Porter QC (instructed by Messrs Browne Jacobson LLP) for the Defendant
The Third party was neither present nor represented
Hearing dates: 18th to 20th February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge McKenna:
Introduction
i) Did the Claimant damage her neck in the accident on 10th May 2004?
ii) If she did damage her neck, is that damage causally connected with the symptoms subsequently related by her and if so, to what extent?
iii) If the Claimant had not damaged her neck in the accident then the what would have been her prognosis?
Did the claimant damage her neck in the accident on 10th May 2004?
"Slipped over whilst at work at 17.40 onto hard surface. O/A c/o severe pain to coccyx, sacral area and radiating to left and right 0 head injury, 0 LOC" (interpreted as no head injury and no lost of consciousness).
"Your patient attended our A&E Department on Monday 10th May 2004 at 6:16pm referred by: Self. Their presenting complaint was: - back injury. On examination I found: - Fall. No focal neurology. Investigations: diagnosis: sprain, buttocks. Disposal: allowed home."
In addition, the GP note for the 10th May (bundle, page 478) contains the following:
"Slipped over at work, fell on hard surface on coccyx, sacral. No other injuries"
And at page 611 the following entry is to be found:
"Unspecified disorder of the coccyx fall ++"
On the 18th June 2004 the GP notes include the following reference:
"Having physio – trapped nerves in neck and lower back"
On the 24th June 2004 the initial assessment by an osteopath includes a reference to the Claimant having presented with pain in her neck accompanied by occipito-frontal headaches (bundle, page 835).
Issue 2 - If she did damage her neck, is that damage causally connected with the symptoms subsequently related by her and if so to what extent?
"(i) besides glandular fever and the wrist injury Mrs Lay denied any other relevant medical issues.
(ii) She had one episode of sciatica in May 2001, which required one week off work. This followed a long sitting episode at her desk. She did not suffer any recurrence.
(iii) There was a suggestion of mild scoliosis as a child for which she received a back support. There was no corrective surgery and the problem resolved itself."
"She reports herself as otherwise fit and well. As noted previously Mrs Lay states that she developed rheumatoid arthritis since the accident. She confirmed that there was no family history of rheumatoid arthritis although her great grandmother suffered from polymyalgia rheumatica.
In 1996 (should be 1995) Mrs Lay had a road traffic accident in which she had a whiplash injury to her neck and this settled. She had scoliosis as a child and was under the car of Alan Gardner, consultant orthopaedic and spinal surgeon in Basildon. She wore a brace as did her sister. She had low back pain after delivery of her son. She is an ex-smoker of one year."
"This remains unchanged from my previous report and Mrs Lay confirmed that she had no pre-accident history of neck pain prior to the accident. She is an ex-smoker."
"Both experts note that Mrs Lay had a significant past medical history and had had an adolescent idiopathic scoliosis for which she had received medical attention but no surgical treatment. She also had a pre-accident history of neck and low back pain which we believe was significant in the period leading up to the accident of 10th May 2004."
"Mrs Lay informed me that she has been experiencing neck pain for a long time, in fact since her accident. She informed me that this was reported initially but focus was placed on her lumbar spine, as it has been the major source of her pain and restricted mobility"
"Both experts agree that if this is the case, Mrs Lay did suffer from a simple muscular ligamentous injury of her neck consistent with the mechanism of the injury.
Both experts have now seen the chiropractor/osteopath records which post-date her injury and have commented upon them in our respective reports. Both accept that in the aftermath of the injury Mrs Lay did receive osteopathic attention to her neck. Both do acknowledge that there was a degree of spinal complaint prior to the index accident. Her last was documented in December 2003 where she complained of some neck pain which was five months prior to the index accident.
Neither expert believes that the chiropractor records have significantly altered their respective views on the matter that there has been a period of post-accident neck pain.
Both experts agree that Mrs Lay did suffer from a soft-tissue injury to her neck as described above. Mr Marks believes that the likely timescale of relevant symptoms would have been an average of 14 months. Mr Kirkpatrick believes that this would lie between 12 and 24 months.
Both experts who have reviewed the pre-operative MRI scan of the neck indicate that to all sense and purposes the discs were normal and there was no sign of any degenerative process evident. Both experts did know that there was some loss of the normal cervical lordosis consistent with muscular spasm. Both experts confirm that she had pre-accident cervical symptoms. Both experts would have expected her to have recovered given the aforementioned findings on the MRI scan and the timescales that they have set out. There were no relevant clinical signs to demonstrate an adverse prognosis prior to the surgery on the cervical spine. We agree that she had relevant symptoms which would have given an indication of quanisity and recurrence.
Both experts would have expected that the effects of the index accident, in the absence of any surgery, would have been one of progressive improvement in the timescales discussed above. At the end of these respective periods the experts would have expected her baseline symptomology to have returned to normal. Mr Kirkpatrick believes this to be of a very low grade nature and largely postural in origin. Mr Marks agrees with this and refers to the general practitioner notes indicating that Mrs Lay would have relapsed again spontaneously in any respect."
I should, for the sake of completeness and because Counsel for the Claimant relies on what he says is a change in Mr Marks' position, evidenced by their first joint statement, make reference to the relevant contents of the first joint report (page 199 at page 201) made at a time (April 2008) when it is fair say that the focus was on the lumbar spine injury.
"Both experts therefore are not surprised that Mrs Lay's condition has apparently deteriorated since the surgery. They would state in joint agreement that they believe that in the absence of the surgery she would have recovered had she been treated in a persisting conservative manner although they feel her condition would have been somewhat aggravated they believe this would be no more than a period of 18-24 months."
Issue 3 - If the Claimant had not damaged her neck in the accident then what would have been her prognosis?
Conclusion