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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gossip, R (on the application of) v NHS Surrey Downs Clinical Commissioning Group [2019] EWHC 3411 (Admin) (17 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3411.html Cite as: [2020] Med LR 84, [2019] EWHC 3411 (Admin), (2020) 23 CCL Rep 373, [2020] WLR(D) 341, [2020] PTSR 1239 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
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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R (on the application of David GOSSIP) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NHS SURREY DOWNS CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP |
Defendant |
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Vikram Sachdeva QC and Jack Anderson (instructed by Hill Dickinson Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 30 August 2019 & 20 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Upper Tribunal Judge Allen :
Introduction
'Where a person has been assessed to have a "primary health need" they are eligible for NHS continuing healthcare. Deciding whether this is the case involves looking at the totality of the relevant needs. Where an individual has a primary health need and is therefore eligible for NHS continuing healthcare, the NHS is responsible for providing all of that individual's health and social care needs – including accommodation, if that is part of the overall need' (paragraph 33)
Local authorities are prevented by law from employing nurses to deliver social care services (section 22 of the Care Act 2014).
The Law
"The National Health Service Commissioning Board and Clinical Commissioning Groups (Responsibilities and Standing Rules) Regulations 2012
PART 6
Standing rules: NHS Continuing Healthcare and NHS funded nursing care
Duty of relevant bodies: assessment and provision of NHS Continuing Healthcare
21.—(1) In exercising its functions under or by virtue of sections 3, 3A or 3B of the 2006 Act, insofar as they relate to NHS Continuing Healthcare, a relevant body must comply with paragraphs (2) to (11).
(2) A relevant body must take reasonable steps to ensure that an assessment of eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare is carried out in respect of a person for which that body has responsibility in all cases where it appears to that body that—
(a) there may be a need for such care; or
(b) an individual who is receiving NHS Continuing Healthcare may no longer be eligible for such care.
(3) If an assessment for NHS Continuing Healthcare is required under paragraph (2)(a), the relevant body must ensure that it is carried out before any assessment pursuant to regulation 28(1) (persons who enter relevant premises or who develop a need for nursing care) is carried out.
(4) If a relevant body wishes to use an initial screening process to decide whether to undertake an assessment of a person's eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare it must—
(a) complete and use the NHS Continuing Healthcare Checklist issued by the Secretary of State and dated 28th November 2012 to inform that decision;
(b) inform that person (or someone lawfully acting on that person's behalf) in writing of the decision as to whether to carry out an assessment of that person's eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare; and
(c) make a record of that decision.
(5) When carrying out an assessment of eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare, a relevant body must ensure that—
(a) a multi-disciplinary team—
(i) undertakes an assessment of needs, or has undertaken an assessment of needs, that is an accurate reflection of that person's needs at the date of the assessment of eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare, and
(ii) uses that assessment of needs to complete the Decision Support Tool for NHS Continuing Healthcare issued by the Secretary of State and dated 28th November 2012; and
(b) the relevant body makes a decision as to whether that person has a primary health need in accordance with paragraph (7), using the completed Decision Support Tool to inform that decision.
(6) If a relevant body decides that a person has a primary health need in accordance with paragraph (5)(b), it must also decide that that person is eligible for NHS Continuing Healthcare.
(7) In deciding whether a person has a primary health need in accordance with paragraph (5)(b), a relevant body must consider whether the nursing or other health services required by that person are—
(a) where that person is, or is to be, accommodated in relevant premises, more than incidental or ancillary to the provision of accommodation which a social services authority is, or would be but for a person's means, under a duty to provide; or
(b) of a nature beyond which a social services authority whose primary responsibility is to provide social services could be expected to provide,
and, if it decides that the nursing or other health services required do, when considered in their totality, fall within sub-paragraph (a) or (b), it must decide that that person has a primary health need.
(8) Paragraphs (2) to (6) do not apply where an appropriate clinician decides that—
(a) an individual has a primary health need arising from a rapidly deteriorating condition; and
(b) the condition may be entering a terminal phase,
and that clinician has completed a Fast Track Pathway Tool stating reasons for the decision.
(9) A relevant body must, upon receipt of a Fast Track Pathway tool completed in accordance with paragraph (8), decide that a person is eligible for NHS Continuing Healthcare.
(10) Where an assessment of eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare has been carried out, or a relevant body has received a Fast Track Pathway Tool completed in accordance with paragraph (8), the relevant body must—
(a) notify the person assessed (or someone lawfully acting on that person's behalf), in writing, of the decision made about their eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare, the reasons for that decision and, where applicable, the matters referred to in paragraph (11); and
(b) make a record of that decision.
(11) Where a relevant body has decided that a person is not eligible for NHS Continuing Healthcare, it must inform the person (or someone acting on that person's behalf) of the circumstances and manner in which that person may apply for a review of the decision if they are dissatisfied with—
(a) the procedure followed by the relevant body in reaching that decision; or
(b) the primary health need decision made in accordance with paragraph (5)(b).
(12) In carrying out its duties under this regulation, a relevant body must have regard to the National Framework.
(13) In this regulation-
'appropriate clinician' means a person who is—
(a) responsible for the diagnosis, treatment or care of the person under the 2006 Act in respect of whom a Fast Track Pathway Tool is being completed, and
(b) a registered nurse or a registered medical practitioner;
'healthcare profession' means a profession which is concerned (wholly or partly) with the physical or mental health of individuals (whether or not that person is regulated by, or by virtue of, any enactment);
'multi-disciplinary team' means a team consisting of at least—
(a) two professionals who are from different healthcare professions, or
(b) one professional who is from a healthcare profession and one person who is responsible for assessing persons for community care services under section 47 of the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990.
Duty of relevant bodies: joint working with social services authorities
22.—(1) A relevant body must, insofar as is reasonably practicable—
(a) consult with the relevant social services authority before making a decision about a person's eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare, including any decision that a person receiving NHS Continuing Healthcare is no longer eligible to do so; and
(b) co-operate with the relevant social services authority in arranging for persons to participate in a multi-disciplinary team for the purpose of fulfilling its duty under regulation 21(5).
…"
i) are no more than incidental or ancillary to the provision of accommodation which local authority social services are, or would be but for a person's means, under a duty to provide; and
ii) are not of a nature beyond which a local authority whose primary responsibility it is to provide social services could be expected to provide.
"In discharging its functions the CCG was obliged to take the National Framework into account. The CCG is susceptible to challenge on Wednesbury principles for failing to consider the National Framework, or misconstruing or misapplying it: see R v North Derbyshire Health Authority ex parte Fisher (1997) 38 BMLR 76".
Factual Background
"Panel unable to verify due to no supporting evidence for the DST scores. Evidence to be gathered prior to a new MDT DST being completed. SCC to request that the PA provides 4 weeks of diaries of day to day management of Mr Gossip's needs. Booker – please arrange MDT DST assessment when the diaries are complete."
Discussion
"The courts should not permit, except for good reason, proceedings for judicial review to proceed if a significant part of the issues between the parties could be resolved outside the litigation process."
"whether the alternative statutory remedy will resolve the question at issue fully and directly; whether the statutory procedure would be quicker, or slower, and procedure by way of judicial review; whether the matter depends on some particular or technical knowledge which is more readily available to the alternative appellate body".
Grounds
"14-10. Panel unable to verify due to no supporting evidence for the DST scores. Evidence to be gathered prior to a new MDT DST being completed. SCC to request that the PA provides four weeks of diaries of day-to-day management of Mr Gossip's needs. Booker – please arrange MPT DST assessment when the diaries are complete".
"The CCG may choose to use a panel to ensure consistency and quality of decision making. However, a panel should not fulfil a gate-keeping function, and nor should it be used as a financial monitor. Only in exceptional circumstances, and for clearly articulated reasons, should the multi-disciplinary team's recommendation not be followed. A decision not to accept the recommendation should never be made by one person acting unilaterally".
"- where the DST is not completed fully (including where there is no recommendation)
- where there are significant gaps in evidence to support the recommendation
- where there is an obvious mismatch between evidence provided and the recommendation made
- where the recommendation would result in either authority acting unlawfully.
41.2 In such cases the matter should be sent back to the MDT with a full explanation of the relevant matters to be addressed. Where there is an urgent need for care/support to be provided, the CCG (and LA where relevant) should make appropriate interim arrangements without delay. Ultimately responsibility for the eligibility decision rests with the CCG".
"Accordingly, a benevolent approach should be adopted to the interpretation of review decisions. The court should not take too technical a view of the language used, or search for inconsistencies, or adopt a nit-picking approach, when confronted with an appeal against a review decision. That is not to say that the court should approve incomprehensible or misguided reasoning, but it should be realistic and practical in its approach to the interpretation of review decisions."
"It is therefore probably an unacceptable gloss on the statutory decision making scheme for the decision making panel to be required to find 'exceptional circumstances' before it is entitled to reach a different decision from the MDT as expressed in the DST. The better view is that the panel has a duty to make its own decision as to whether the patient has a primary health need, duly informed by the views of the MDT as expressed in the DST and that in doing so it should place considerable weight on the views of the DST. However, notwithstanding the duty to give considerable weight to the contents of the DST, the panel has to reach its own conclusions and is not limited to following the DST unless it finds that there are exceptional circumstances".
"… there was no documentation/risk or assessment tools to use as supporting evidence within each of the domain areas, as there aren't any. This would include tools such as Waterlow, Must or care plan/evaluation sheets. The scorings and recommended outcome were therefore based predominantly on verbal evidence from Mr Gossip. … Mr Gossip was made aware of limitations not having documented supporting evidence …".
"Panel unable to verify due to no supporting evidence for the DST's scores …".
"Eligibility for NHS Continuing Healthcare
The National Framework for NHS continuing healthcare and NHS funded-nursing care (revised, 2012) provides a consistent approach to establishing eligibility for NHS continuing healthcare. This is achieved through the use of the revised National Tools and Guidance developed to assist in making decisions about eligibility for continuing healthcare".
"… the matter should be sent back to the MDT with a full explanation of the relevant matters to be addressed. Where there is an urgent need for care/support to be provided, the CCG (and LA where relevant) should make appropriate interim arrangements without delay".
It is argued that in this case the CCG had a positive recommendation that it did not accept, but the panel failed to follow the guidance in not referring the matter back to the MDT and despite the fact that Mr Gossip had an urgent need for care, no interim arrangements were made to provide services to him.
"may ask a multidisciplinary team to carry out further work on a Decision Support Tool if it is not completed fully or there is a significant lack of consistency between the evidence recorded in the Decision Support Tool and the recommendation made",
and that, as it seems to me, does not require the same MDT to do the work. What was done was consistent with the guidance in the National Framework. I agree also with the argument that in any event any failure to adhere to the National Framework Guidance does not amount to unlawfulness (provided it was not ignored) as it is a relevant factor in the process and no more than that. It is clear from the Regulations that the final decision-maker is always the CCG.
"In such cases [where a panel does not accept an MDT decision regarding eligibility] the matter should be sent back to the MDT with a full explanation of the matters to be addressed."
"CCGs should be aware of cases that have indicated circumstances in which eligibility for NHS continuing healthcare should have been determined, and where such an outcome would be expected if the same facts were considered in an assessment for NHS continuing healthcare under the National Framework (e.g. Coughlan or those cases in the Health Service Ombudsman's report on NHS funding for the long-term care of old and disabled people)".
"wary of trying to draw generalisations about eligibility for NHS continuing healthcare from the limited information they may have about … cases [that have indicated circumstances in which eligibility for NHS continuing healthcare should have been determined]"
and going on specifically to mention Coughlan in this regard. The point is further made that the CCG considers that the claimant's needs are in fact less significant than those of Ms Coughlan and does not, pursuant to paragraph 90 of the National Framework, consider that a comparison with Ms Coughlan's needs is illuminating for the purposes of answering the question whether the claimant was or is eligible for CHC funding. It is relevant also that the National Framework at paragraph 90 states: "There is no substitute for a careful and detailed assessment of the needs of the individual whose eligibility is in question". That, in my view, is the key point in paragraph 90. Inevitably cases will be fact-sensitive, and it was fully open to the defendant, following the panel's thorough and careful review, to conclude as it did without the need to refer specifically to Coughlan or any of the cases in the Ombudsman's report.