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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> M (A Child), Re [2014] EWCA Civ 420 (18 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/420.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 420 |
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ON APPEAL FROM MIDDLESBROUGH COUNTY COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF M (A CHILD) |
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"Happily, on one basis, this case is not about a mother who is incompetent or unable to provide ordinary, good enough or even good physical and practical care for her children. Unhappily, and frustratingly for all involved, I dare say, particularly the mother and the children, the concern about the mother's ability to parent is more subtle and harder to pinpoint, but it arises from her personality and the potential for the children to be upset by unpredictable actions or words that she may from time to time exhibit.Judge Hallam concluded in the note that we have, that is the note of her judgment, that a residential assessment was not necessary because enough was known about the mother's practical day-to-day parenting and that that was not a fundamental issue in the case. She said:"The fundamental issues in this case are psychological and psychiatric." On that basis, reading the note as best I can, the judge concluded that a residential assessment, which is as we all know focused upon practical parenting, was not going to provide more evidence that would have been of use to the court. It therefore seems to me entirely understandable that Judge Hallam said it was not necessary to conduct a residential assessment and the Court of Appeal would not hold that she was wrong in that determination."
"Mrs M was described by Dr Thorpe as having personality disorders. The nature of a personality disorder is that a person has fixed and static ways of reacting to events and people which cause difficulties to themselves in managing their own emotions and their relationships with other people. These difficulties are typically slow to change, and require long periods of therapeutic intervention before change occurs and is maintained. That intervention can take several years to achieve. As Dr Thorpe points out, the process of change can be intermittent, and the individual can revert to former unhelpful ways of interacting in times of stress."
Then at paragraph 21, Mrs Bradley says this:
"Mrs M has sought therapeutic help. The C.B.T. [Cognitive Behavioural Therapy] offered is unlikely to meet her needs. The Talking Changes and the PCP service both offer short-term interventions aiming to help people with specific psychological difficulties. Mrs M needs to have a long term input in which the therapist can offer multiple forms of help, including coping strategies for anxiety, as well as offering help focusing on longer term issues, such as post-traumatic symptoms, issues of trust and unhelpful relationship patterns. This is likely to require at least 30 session of therapy over a period of 18 months to 2 years. Mrs M's determination to prove her worth will help her in this process. However, the process of change will be hindered by changes in therapist, and unpleasant life events. As it is a specialized, long term intervention, the waiting list for this form of therapy is long. Mrs M has reported that she has some funding for therapy herself ..."
Finally this at paragraph 22:
"The stress of caring for a large family would be likely to impede the progress of therapy. Mrs M would need to attend therapy regularly and would not be able to have the care of her child(ren) during the therapy sessions. Mrs M is likely to need to attend appointments in a central facility, not her local GP surgery. Therefore some time will be spent travelling to and from therapy sessions. An issue for therapy would be building trust in social services. Therefore the therapist would need to be clearly separate from that service."
I should record that Mrs M told me that Mrs Bradley has since indicated that the timescale might not be as long as is there indicated but of course I have only seen what she has written in the report itself. Plainly what is involved is a long and uncertain process.