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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust v TH & Anor [2014] EWCOP 4 (22 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2014/4.html Cite as: [2014] EWCOP 4 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SHEFFIELD TEACHING HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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TH (BY HIS LITIGATION FRIEND THE OFFICIAL SOLICITOR ) -and- TR |
1ST Respondent 2ND Respondent |
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Miss Roberts QC (instructed by The Official Solicitor) for the 1st Respondent
TR the 2nd Respondent in person
Hearing dates: 14th & 15th May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was delivered in private. The judge has given leave for this version of the judgment to be published on condition that (irrespective of what is contained in the judgment) in any published version of the judgment the anonymity of the incapacitated person and members of their family must be strictly preserved. All persons, including representatives of the media, must ensure that this condition is strictly complied with. Failure to do so will be a contempt of court.
Mr Justice Hayden :
"It is therefore of the utmost importance that every step should be taken to diagnose the patient's true condition before any application is made to the court. Professor Turner-Stokes said in evidence that she was 'reasonably confident that future guidelines will state that, before making any decision concerning the withholding of ANH there should be formal testing in the form of the SMART diagnostic test coupled with WHIM tests carried out over a period of time. In future therefore, no such application for an order authorising the withdrawal of ANH from a patient in a vegetative state or a minimally conscious state should be made unless:
(1) a SMART assessment (or similarly validated equivalent) has been carried out to provide a diagnosis of a patient's disorder of consciousness and
(2) in the case of a patient thereby diagnosed as being in a minimally conscious state a series of WHIM assessments have been carried out over time with a view to tracking a patients progress and recovery (if any) through the minimally conscious state. If an assessment scale becomes validated in the medical literature for tracking a person's recovery through the minimally conscious state, this assessment may alternatively be used in the place of the WHIM."
Professor Turner-Stokes remarks were prescient the 'future guidelines' became the NICE guidelines to which I have already referred.
"Regrettably, I do not consider that TH has rehabilitative potential. He is being assessed by therapy services on the ward and his lack of communication precludes any meaningful learning that would be required to undergo a period of rehabilitation. He needs passive therapy in a sense of stretching exercises for the limbs and good quality nursing care. The nursing care would include appropriate management of his feeding, catheter, pressure areas, etc. However this is nursing care rather than rehabilitation."
Antibiotic Therapy
Nutrition and Hydration
"My estimate of the worst case scenario is that TH could die within the next few days/weeks as a result of complications of his neurological condition. A likely possibility is overwhelming infection giving rise to pneumonia/septicaemia. The possibility of renal failure also needs to be considered. It is also quite possible that he could have cardiopulmonary arrest as a result of the brain damage in the pontine region. The best case scenario would be that TH does not develop such complications and is able to live for several more months or even a year or so. This is a possibility as long as he receives good quality nursing care. I have seen many individuals who in similar advance state of neurological disability who with good quality nursing care and appropriate treatment of complications have managed to live for many months/years in a similar disabled state. On the balance of probabilities I consider that his actual prognosis is nearer the worst case scenario than the best case scenario."
"The key issue for the court to determine is whether TH has actually made an advance statement that binds his clinicians and carers. Put simply is it in TH's best interest for him to be treated and cared for in hospital and/or nursing home or should he be permitted to return home to die."
24 Advance decisions to refuse treatment: general
(1)"Advance decision" means a decision made by a person ("P"), after he has reached 18 and when he has capacity to do so, that if—
(a)at a later time and in such circumstances as he may specify, a specified treatment is proposed to be carried out or continued by a person providing health care for him, and
(b)at that time he lacks capacity to consent to the carrying out or continuation of the treatment, the specified treatment is not to be carried out or continued.
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1)(a), a decision may be regarded as specifying a treatment or circumstances even though expressed in layman's terms.
(3)P may withdraw or alter an advance decision at any time when he has capacity to do so.
(4)A withdrawal (including a partial withdrawal) need not be in writing.
(5)An alteration of an advance decision need not be in writing (unless section 25(5) applies in relation to the decision resulting from the alteration).
25 Validity and applicability of advance decisions
(1)An advance decision does not affect the liability which a person may incur for carrying out or continuing a treatment in relation to P unless the decision is at the material time—
(a)valid, and
(b)applicable to the treatment.
(2)An advance decision is not valid if P—
(a)has withdrawn the decision at a time when he had capacity to do so,
(b)has, under a lasting power of attorney created after the advance decision was made, conferred authority on the donee (or, if more than one, any of them) to give or refuse consent to the treatment to which the advance decision relates, or
(c)has done anything else clearly inconsistent with the advance decision remaining his fixed decision.
(3)An advance decision is not applicable to the treatment in question if at the material time P has capacity to give or refuse consent to it.
(4)An advance decision is not applicable to the treatment in question if—
(a)that treatment is not the treatment specified in the advance decision,
(b)any circumstances specified in the advance decision are absent, or
(c)there are reasonable grounds for believing that circumstances exist which P did not anticipate at the time of the advance decision and which would have affected his decision had he anticipated them.
(5)An advance decision is not applicable to life-sustaining treatment unless—
(a)the decision is verified by a statement by P to the effect that it is to apply to that treatment even if life is at risk, and
(b)the decision and statement comply with subsection (6).
(6)A decision or statement complies with this subsection only if—
(a)it is in writing,
(b)it is signed by P or by another person in P's presence and by P's direction,
(c)the signature is made or acknowledged by P in the presence of a witness, and
(d)the witness signs it, or acknowledges his signature, in P's presence.
(7)The existence of any lasting power of attorney other than one of a description mentioned in subsection (2)(b) does not prevent the advance decision from being regarded as valid and applicable."
26 Effect of advance decisions
(1)If P has made an advance decision which is—
(a)valid, and
(b)applicable to a treatment,
the decision has effect as if he had made it, and had had capacity to make it, at the time when the question arises whether the treatment should be carried out or continued.
(2)A person does not incur liability for carrying out or continuing the treatment unless, at the time, he is satisfied that an advance decision exists which is valid and applicable to the treatment.
(3)A person does not incur liability for the consequences of withholding or withdrawing a treatment from P if, at the time, he reasonably believes that an advance decision exists which is valid and applicable to the treatment.
(4)The court may make a declaration as to whether an advance decision—
(a)exists;
(b)is valid;
(c)is applicable to a treatment.
(5)Nothing in an apparent advance decision stops a person—
(a)providing life-sustaining treatment, or
(b)doing any act he reasonably believes to be necessary to prevent a serious deterioration in P's condition,
while a decision as respects any relevant issue is sought from the court.
i) The MCA is concerned with enabling the court to do for the patient what he could do for himself if of full capacity, but goes no further (see paragraph 18);
ii) The fundamental question is whether it is lawful to give the treatment (see paragraph 20) and the focus is whether it is in the patient's best interest to give the treatment rather than on whether it is in the best interest to withhold or withdraw it (see paragraph 21);
iii) The MCA emphasises the need to see the patient as an individual with his own values, likes and dislikes, and to consider his best interest in an holistic way.
"40. In my view, therefore, Peter Jackson J was correct in his approach. Given the genesis of the concepts used in the Code of Practice, he was correct to consider whether the proposed treatments would be futile in the sense of being ineffective or being of no benefit to the patient. Two of the treatments had been tried before and had worked. He was also correct to say that "recovery does not mean a return to full health, but the resumption of a quality of life which Mr James would regard as worthwhile". He clearly did consider that the treatments in question were very burdensome. But he considered that those burdens had to be weighed against the benefits of a continued existence. He was also correct to see the assessment of the medical effects of the treatment as only part of the equation. Regard had to be had to the patient's welfare in the widest sense, and great weight to be given to Mr James' family life which was "of the closest and most meaningful kind"."
"There are no winners in this situation at all. All I can say is that I believe with all my body and soul that TH would find the situation he was in a living hell, and if we cared anything for him, we would let him go and find peace."