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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> County Durham & Darlington NHS Foundation Trust v PP & Ors [2014] EWCOP 9 (26 June 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2014/9.html Cite as: [2014] EWCOP 9 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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County Durham & Darlington NHS Foundation Trust |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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PP (By her litigation Friend, the Official Solicitor) H, D & S |
Respondents |
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Mr. Angus Moon QC & Ms Susanna Rickard (instructed by Langleys Solicitors LLP, as agent for the Official Solicitor) for P
H and D were neither present nor represented
Ms Victoria Butler-Cole (instructed by Irwin Mitchell) for S
Hearing dates: 25-26 June 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice Cobb :
a. That it is lawful and in P's best interests to continue to receive artificial hydration via subcutaneous injection.
b. That it is lawful and in P's best interests that the Trust's treating clinicians shall be permitted:-
i. Not to provide artificial nutrition by a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube or via an alternative artificial feeding regime; and
ii. Not to resuscitate her in the event of either a cardiac or respiratory arrest.
a. The Official Solicitor, on behalf of P herself, does not oppose the making of the declarations, his final position clarifying once the court had heard the oral evidence of Dr. Bell. Insofar as I am able to ascertain P's likely views at all, they are said to emerge from a discussion between the Official Solicitor's agent, Ms. McKendry, and H on Tuesday 24 June; H thought that if one could ask P now what her wishes would be, he thought she would say that "probably when it came to the last" she "should be allowed to sink into death". It is not, in fairness, entirely clear from the context whether H was expressing his own views, or the views of P;
b. I am told that H does not oppose the making of the declarations;
c. D, at one time (notably at the 16 May 2014 'Best Interests' meeting – see §12 below) was believed actively to be supportive of the application, or part of it (namely in relation to the withholding of resuscitation); in an e-mail to S's solicitor following that meeting dated 6 June, she stated that she would have supported the 'DNR' (Do Not Resuscitate) status being applied, but felt that the hospital had been too hasty to withdraw food and fluid, and she had therefore lost confidence in the overall treatment regime; she said that she felt pressured at the meeting, and (by the time of the e-mail) did not support the DNR. By the time of the hearing, her position had modified again; it appears (from a discussion with Dr. Bell on 22 June 2014, which I am told is accurate) that she recognised that her mother is in a terminal phase of her life, and would want her mother's last days to be spent in "a nice environment"; she accepted that physical resuscitation manoeuvres would be inappropriate but would want her mother to have relief from discomfort or distress.
d. S has been, until the morning of this final hearing, the main opponent of the Trust's application, and the apparent spokesperson for the family. He is angry at what he perceives to be sub-standard care delivered to his mother-in-law in Ivy Dene Nursing Home and Darlington Memorial Hospital; he has filed a statement in which he bluntly accuses the care staff of failing to discharge their professional duty. It appears from the totality of the documents filed (including limited inter partes correspondence) that he and his solicitor have devoted significant time and energy into collating evidence for a potential civil action, which I cannot but observe has detracted a little from the key issues engaged in these proceedings. No one doubts S's love and concern for P; it is not said that he is otherwise than sincerely and genuinely trying to do what is best for P. As the hearing began yesterday, I was advised that he would no longer oppose the application.
Background
Capacity
"she had a vascular demented process with diminished consciousness, most probably a Binswanger type ischaemic encephalopathy. I felt her prognosis was and remains very poor with a negligible prospect of recovery. She clearly did not have mental capacity…"
Dr. Bell adds:
"[P] is extremely unlikely to make any progress along the spectrum of the minimally conscious state before death supervenes, and any such progress will not be associated with restoration of capacity".
The views of the treating clinicians on the key decisions
a. Dr Manas Desai, Consultant Gastro-enterologist;
b. Dr. Lucy Nicholson, Palliative care consultant;
c. Dr. David Bruce, Consultant Physician and Chief of Service in Elderly Care;
d. Dr. Sarah Jordan, Consultant Gastro-enterologist;
e. Dr. Pradip De, Associate Specialist in Respiratory Medicine;
f. Dr. Stephen Cowie, Consultant in Respiratory Medicine.
"There would be significant chance of causing harm and distress even if cardiac output is successfully restored (significant chance of hypoxic brain damage and risk of rib fractures and internal organ damage)"
Dr. Bruce was of the view that CPR would be "unpleasant", and of no benefit.
Dr. Dominic Bell
a. PEG and the provision/withholding of nutrition: He opined that the technical hurdles to the safe placement of a feeding gastrostomy tube, together with the difficulties in subsequently monitoring for complications and the ongoing functionality of such a device created by the patient's abnormal posture, outweigh any potential benefits in restoring or maintaining a meaningful quality-of-life. The alternative option of attempting to re-establish enteral nutrition via a nasogastric tube is likely to precipitate pulmonary aspiration or the 're-feeding syndrome' (i.e. re-introducing foods to those who have been significantly starved for any period of time) or both, if delivered in the amounts required to limit any further nutritional 'slippage',
"regardless of the technical difficulties in insertion and requirements for imaging, potential for patient discomfort and lack of benefit for the same in restoring or maintaining a meaningful quality-of-life as perceived by the patient".
In his conclusions, he confirmed that the 'anatomical configuration' of P would represent a technical barrier to PEG insertion and to evaluating her for the development of post-operative complications.
"Her current frailty and nutritional status as defined by her low albumin levels would create a risk of compromised wound healing and associated risk of leakage of bowel content into the abdominal cavity and sepsis from peritonitis. Given her current status it is unlikely that the feed will be tolerated, creating a risk of nausea and vomiting, aspiration of gastric contents, and diarrhoea causing the discomfort associated with already problematical personal hygiene. It is highly likely that given the length of time since nutritional supplementation and the current lower than normal phosphate levels that P would also be at risk of the re-feeding syndrome."
He added:
"I have also considered the option of feeding via a nasogastric tube within the body of this report and do not believe that the potential benefits outweigh the feasibility or associated complications."
b. In oral evidence he helpfully explained some of that terminology and the processes described above, discussing fairly and with care the potential benefits of, and contra-indicators to (indeed the dangers of) the procedure and its potential adverse consequence. He further expressed the view that the administration of a general anaesthetic which would be necessary in order to achieve insertion of the PEG would in itself carry significant and unacceptable risks to P's welfare.
c. Resuscitation: Dr. Bell told me that resuscitation manoeuvres of either an electrical or mechanical nature would be technically difficult due to the patient's body habitus. Such a procedure would be likely to be associated with physical harm to P given her frailty. He felt that it would be highly unlikely to be successful in restoring life due to a cardiac arrest representing the end stage of the dying process, and would in any event be incapable of restoring or maintaining a meaningful quality-of-life. He concluded his report by advising that:
"Given the 'anatomical configuration' of [P], there are practical barriers to the effective conduct of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and given her overall frailty it is inevitable that these manoeuvres would be associated with chest wall damage and secondary injury to the internal structures. Given that any cardiac arrest requiring such manoeuvres would represent the end stage of the dying process, the chance of restoring a spontaneous circulation sufficient to maintain life for any sustainable period is virtually non-existent. Furthermore, for the reasons set out within the body of this report such manoeuvres would not in any regard be associated with the restoration of a meaningful quality-of-life."
d. In his oral evidence he described the physical impact of resuscitation involving compression of the chest wall; my note of his evidence reads:
"the chest wall becomes less resilient the older the patient, and the ribs are less robust. To apply a force necessary to compress a heart involves forcing the anterior chest wall almost to meet the posterior chest wall."
He described the "near certainty" of fracturing P's rib in the CPR procedure, with the effect of causing haemorrhaging within the chest cavity; adding that "the fractured ribs may well perforate the heart, lung or other organs in the abdominal cavity."
Transfer to The Elms
a. That it may well cause P pain discomfort and distress at this point at the end of her life (though that rather depends on the view one takes of her conscious state); he points to the difficulty in making her safe during the journey given her posture and anatomical limitations;
b. The break in continuity of staff; first, P would lose the benefit of the familiarity of voices and environment. Secondly, the benefits to P of being cared for by staff who have accumulated a repository of knowledge and experience of her will be lost; there is a risk that subtle indicators of P's comfort/discomfort may be lost at a critical stage of her life.
My approach on the law
"Where the determination relates to life-sustaining treatment [the person making the determination] must not, in considering whether the treatment is in the best interests of the person concerned, be motivated by a desire to bring about his death."
"All reasonable steps which are in a person's best interests should be taken to prolong their life. There will be a limited number of cases where treatment is futile, overly burdensome to the patient or where there is no prospect of recovery. In circumstances such as these, it may be that an assessment of best interests leads to the conclusion that it would be in the best interests of the patient to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining treatment, even if this may result in the person's death. The decision-maker must make a decision based on the best interests of the person who lacks capacity…"
"The most that can be said, therefore is that in considering the best interests of this particular patient at this particular time, decision-makers must look at his welfare in the widest sense, not just medical but social and psychological; they must consider the nature of the medical treatment in question, what it involves and its prospects of success; they must consider what the outcome of that treatment for the patient is likely to be; they must try to put themselves in the place of the individual patient and ask what his attitude is or would be likely to be; and they must consult others who are looking after him or interested in his welfare, in particular for their view of what his attitude would be."
Conclusion
a. The risks of providing artificial nutrition by a Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy tube or via an alternative artificial feeding regime significantly outweigh the potential benefits to P;
b. That attempts at resuscitation in the event of either a cardiac or respiratory arrest are likely to cause harm to P, which may have terminal or other deleterious consequences, such that it would not now be in her interests that they be attempted.