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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> An Hospital NHS Trust v S & Ors [2003] EWHC 365 (Fam) (6 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2003/365.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 365 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Neutral Citation
No: [2003] EWHC 365 (Fam)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
AN HOSPITAL NHS TRUST |
Claimant | |
- and - |
||
S (by his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) and D. G. (S's father) and S.G. (S's mother) |
First Defendant Second Defendant Third Defendant |
____________________
Miss
Caroline Harry Thomas (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the First
Defendant
Miss Fenella Morris (instructed by Parlett Kent) for the Second and
Third Defendants
Hearing dates : 23, 24 & 27 January
2003
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss P. :
1. There is a difference of opinion as to whether or in what circumstances a kidney transplantation would ever be suitable for S,
2. There is strong disagreement over the possibility of giving S a different form of haemodialysis by the use of an AV fistula.
Background facts.
Current family and school life.
Current medical condition and treatment.
The case for the Hospital Trust
Dr B
"S's learning difficulties are such that understanding the reasons for events taking place or prevention of drink would simply not be understood and S would use the method of communicating that lack of understanding in the only way he knows how which is verbal and physical protest. It is going to be helpful to use visual methods of explaining things to S but even then it does not mean to say that he is necessarily going to accept them."
Dr R
"We have established that he copes extremely poorly with any change to routine. ….S has strong autistic features as part of his condition. Provided he attends for dialysis regularly, provided he sits in the same seat in the dialysis room, provided he has access to his usual toys and games, and so on, then he can cope. However any deviation from this produces great distress in S and his behaviour becomes aggressive and violent. He has hit, punched and kicked his mother and also physically attacked the nursing staff. S has required sedative medication in order to allow us and his mother to manage him."
"Dialysis and transplantation treatment is very unpredictable and prone to sudden and dramatic changes and unexpected need for medical intervention. Transplantation itself poses a huge stress on all families. There are no guarantees of success. The out patient follow up after transplantation in the Paediatric Transplant Clinic is very intense with daily visits for the first 6 weeks, three times a week visits for the next 2 weeks, twice weekly visits for the next month and then weekly visits until 6 months. Following that the visits become slightly less frequent. In a transplant that is completely straightforward with no complications there are some 200 out patient visits in the first year. At each of these visits a blood test is required, blood pressure measurements must be made and so on. S has great fear of needles and venepuncture and we believe he would find this extremely distressing. One of the immunosuppressive drugs that we routinely use, prednisolone, can have profound effect on mood and behaviour in patients, including increased aggression and temperamental behaviour. We are concerned that this would further aggravate S's behavioural problems.
It is certain that S will find this extremely difficult and of course our concern is that he does not understand why this is being "inflicted" on him. By some assessments, S has the mental age of a young child. It might be argued that if we put a normal young child through such difficult treatment, then why would it not be reasonable for S? However, the difference is that children of 3 or 4 years have the capacity for normal intellectual and emotional development, and they will then be able to understand the rationale for their treatment and hopefully appreciate that this has given them a better quality of life. S, however, has got no real future potential for intellectual development, based on the assessments performed, and we firmly believe he will never be able to grasp why he is receiving treatment which he finds so distressing.
Our conclusion
Our conclusion is that kidney transplantation is not in S's best interests. Rather we feel it would be a highly distressing form of treatment which S could not cope with. All our assessments tell us that he would not understand why he was being put through such distress, and that his quality of life, rather than being enhanced, would in fact suffer greatly.
He has achieved some sort of stability and tolerable routine on haemodialysis. This treatment itself is prone to complications and changes. Indeed, S is currently on his 5th dialysis access catheter, and it was during urgent admissions to replace previously blocked or infected catheters that his severe distress and fear of change in routine became so apparent."
Dr A
" Although transplantation is the most appropriate treatment for suitable patients, it is a complex procedure with a recognised morbidity and mortality. The commonest type of donor kidney is from a cadaver source. The likely timing of transplantation from such a source is therefore unpredictable and patients are often called in with little warning. In the adult ESRD programme, once on the transplant waiting list, suitable patients usually wait for 1-5 years on dialysis before a kidney can be found for them. Factors that influence the time on dialysis to transplantation include recipient factors such as blood group and immune sensitivity and donor factors including tissue type match and availability. Once admitted for transplantation patients proceed rapidly to theatre for an operation that requires an incision in the pelvis and placement of the transplant kidney. On return to the ward it is vitally important that patients are closely monitored usually with a central intravenous catheter, a bladder catheter and a variety of drips and infusions. A complex regimen of immunosuppressive drugs is administered following transplantation, including high dose steroids. Daily, or often more frequent, blood tests are required as are investigations such as ultrasound or more complex imaging procedures such as CT scanning or magnetic resonance scanning. Because of the danger of infection, the frequent blood tests are taken from arm veins and it would not be possible to leave a line in circulation for monitoring purposes.
A proportion of transplants (approximately 20-30%) do not function from the outset and in this setting patients require continued dialysis and may require frequent renal transplant biopsies at approximately 5-7 day intervals. Renal transplant biopsy is an important tool in the successful management of renal transplantation and is an important method for the diagnosis of transplant dysfunction. A large gauge needle is placed in the kidney usually under ultrasound guidance using local anaesthetic and sedation. The major complication of this procedure is bleeding and therefore patients need to remain still in bed after this procedure. In uncomplicated patients, after a 7-14 day hospital stay, patients can be discharged home but there is an absolute requirement for frequent monitoring of transplant function and immunosuppressive drug levels. For the first 3 months this requires a visit 3 times per week to the transplant unit with blood tests and a fairly frequent requirement for urgent re-admission during this period, usually for a renal biopsy to exclude rejection. The frequency of visits and of blood tests does diminish after the first 3 months but there is an absolute and continuing requirement to monitor graft function and there is no way of doing this other than by blood testing. The transplant procedure and the schedule for post-transplant monitoring are gruelling but, for suitable patients, it does offer a better quality of life and therefore the associated morbidity is acceptable and understood by those patients who are transplanted. Were a patient unable to comprehend and to be distressed by the interventions required during and after the procedure and in the post-transplant period and had no capacity to develop such understanding, then transplantation could not be deemed to be in a patient's best interest. In consultation with our paediatric colleagues and in discussion with a panel of clinicians not linked to either the adult or paediatric renal units, there is a clear view that transplantation would not be in S's best interests now and that no change is likely in the future to alter this view. In this case our opinion is that transplantation could not be deemed to be in S's best interests."
AV Fistula
Sister R
The alternative point of view
Dr Williams
"He is overall functioning in the 5 to 6 year range in most cognitive areas but there is clearly a very marked difficulty in understanding of language and this is in high contrast to his capacity to name individual objects.
Further his ability to express himself is still limited by poor articulation which was evident when he was seen by a psychologist when he was only 3 and a 1/2 to 4 years of age. ….
Overall I found S to be a very gentle and passive young man but one who could engage in activities for lengthy periods with some enjoyment and perhaps most importantly, particularly when seeing him on the computer programme, he shows both a capacity and a strong desire to learn."
Ms C
Miss H
Miss R
The parents
Dr H
Dr C
"The chances of successful renal transplantation would therefore be lower in S, in part because of his underlying immunological and coagulation abnormalities as discussed above and in part because of likely problems with compliance and monitoring in the post transplant period. Compliance with medication is not likely to be a problem with S as it would be entrusted to others. However, clinic attendances, frequent blood tests and sudden decisions to perform further investigations, to admit him or to perform a renal biopsy are likely to be more difficult and not immediately accepted by him. This could result in delayed decisions and less satisfactory care."
"The benefits of successful renal transplantation are likely to be less in a patient such as S. The benefits of freedom from dialysis and improved general health are greatest when the dialysis is preventing the patient from, for example, working, travelling or caring for children. This is not the case with S and therefore I do not feel that a successful transplant would be associated with a dramatic improvement in his quality of life compared with that he is experiencing on haemodialysis."
AV Fistula: Approach of the joint experts.
Competence and consent to treatment
Best interests: the sanctity of life
"…the fundamental principle is the principle of the sanctity of human life - a principle long recognised not only in our own society but also in most, if not all, civilised societies throughout the modern world, as indeed evidenced by its recognition both in article 2 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (Cmd 8969) and in article 6 of the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights 1966.
But this principle, fundamental as it is, is not absolute…….We are concerned with circumstances in which it may be lawful to withhold from a patient medical treatment or care by means of which his life may be prolonged. But here too there is no absolute rule that the patient's life must be prolonged by such treatment or care, if available, regardless of the circumstances."
Best interests: the duty of the medical profession
"I find myself to be respectfully in agreement with Lord Donaldson of Lymington MR, when he said 'I see nothing incongruous in doctors and others who have a caring responsibility being required, when acting in relation to an adult who is incompetent, to exercise a right of choice in exactly the same way as would the court or reasonable parents in relation to a child, making due allowance, of course, for the fact that the patient is not a child, and I am satisfied that that is what the law does in fact require."
"In a situation where there is no application to the court, and the patient does not have capacity to make a decision about medical or surgical treatment, the doctor has, in my judgment, two duties. First he must act at all times in accordance with a responsible and competent body of relevant professional opinion, generally described as the 'Bolam test' (see Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 2 All E R 118 [1957] 1 WLR 582). That is the professional standard set for those who make such decisions. There is a second duty. In re A (Male Sterilisation) [2000] 1 FLR 549 I said at page 555
"The doctor, acting to that required standard, has, in my view, a second duty, that is to say, he must act in the best interests of a mentally incapacitated patient.""
Best interests: the duty of the court
"In a case where an application is made to the court…..it is the judge, not the doctor, who makes the decision that it is in the best interests of the patient that the operation be performed or the treatment be given."
"In my judgment best interests encompasses medical, emotional and all other welfare issues."
"There can be no doubt in my mind that the evaluation of best interests is akin to a welfare appraisal……...
Pending the enactment of a checklist 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 an instance would be the acquisition of foolproof 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 of 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."
S's ability to cope with treatment
The options for treatment
1. Haemodialysis via a central venous catheter
2. Peritoneal dialysis
3. AV Fistula in the arm
4. Possible kidney transplantation in the future
1 and 2. Haemodialysis via permcath/peritoneal dialysis
3. AV Fistula/Fear of needles
Kidney transplantation
Summary
2. I am satisfied that it is in his best interests to continue his present haemodialysis treatment.
3. I consider that the possibility of an AV fistula should not be excluded after he has settled into the adult way of life.
4. When haemodialysis is considered by the medical team caring for him no longer to be effective, I agree with the medical evidence that he should move to peritoneal dialysis.
5. The possibility of a kidney transplantation should not be excluded on non-medical grounds.