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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> LF v A NHS Trust & Ors [2022] EWCOP 8 (07 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2022/8.html Cite as: [2022] EWCOP 8 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LF |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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(1) A NHS TRUST (2) G (BY HER LITIGATION FRIEND, THE OFFICIAL SOLICITOR) (3) M CCG |
Defendant |
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Michael Mylonas QC (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the First Respondent
Sophia Roper (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the Second Respondent
Debra Powell QC (instructed by Hill Dickinson LLP) for the Third Respondent
Claire Overman (instructed by the BBC's legal department) for Intervener
Hearing dates: 23rd February 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hayden:
i. All parties agreed (including G's parents) that G's present circumstances were irreconcilable with either her medical or physical needs;
ii. I concluded, on a compelling body of evidence, that G should move to live at A Home, a specialist residential unit;
iii. As the judgment makes clear, the decision was predicated on analysis of G's needs, in which the cost of alternative options did not become a relevant consideration (my emphasis);
iv. I was persuaded by the evidence that an immediate move by G to her parents' care was likely to "overwhelm" her. She needed a period of assessment and adjustment. In any event, a care package supporting a placement at her parents' home could not be constructed within G's own timescales nor with sufficient robustness;
v. It was necessary to undertake a full and a comprehensive assessment of G's needs, outside the hospital setting, in order to evaluate what was likely to be required when and if she moved to her parents' care;
vi. The judgment makes it clear that a move by G to her parents' care should be the objective of her care plan. In particular, I highlighted that though G had been living in this specialist children hospital for 13 years, the arrangements had been such that she had been cared for primarily by her parents throughout the period;
vii. As G has spent very significant periods of most days away from the ward, with her parents, now over many years, the clinical staff has become unclear as to what her understanding of and interaction with, the world around her is. This is likely to be better understood following the assessment at A Home. This is an unprecedented clinical scenario. No practitioner, from any discipline, has encountered a case of a 27-year-old adult who has spent her entire adult life as an inpatient in a children's hospital;
viii. The relationship between LF and the treating team had become dysfunctional. A previous plan to move G back into the community had been abandoned as LF considered that the quality of local support care was insufficient. I made no judgement on LF's perception of that. Neither do I make any criticism of the hospital with the exception that I considered that they were not sufficiently robust with LF when his view of G's medical needs conflicted with their own.
"I believe that it would be in G's best interests for the RRO to be lifted as it would allow G's story and progress to be shared. G's story is one of success due to her sustained medical stability she now enjoys and how much she has improved. G had a survival rate of only 5% after being diagnosed with osteosarcoma in 2008 and was told that survival rate was only for a further five years."
"I want to emphasise that G has never received any negative comments or suffered any kind of harm from the media articles published about her, many of which provide extensive details of her medical needs that are freely accessible by the public and have been for at least twelve years. G has only received beautiful compliments and praise on her social media platforms"
"If the RRO was lifted, this would allow the family to begin a GoFundMe or other crowd funded campaign to raise funds to purchase a specially adapted vehicle. Lifting the RRO would therefore be in G's best interests as she would have a better platform for these funds to be raised in order for her to see her family. G has gone out into the community with us almost every day of her life and it is clear how much she enjoys these experiences. We have been approached by individuals before to raise these funds but have found it difficult to do so due to the reporting restrictions that are currently in place.
Various celebrities have also offered to be involved by donating to G's fund or promoting the crowdfunding appeal. This endorsement could be of huge value to G and make a significant difference to her life, but it would not be possible without lifting the RRO. This is because supporters with large followings and platforms may be deterred by the reporting restrictions and it wouldn't allow for the full detailed explanation required around the need for such a vehicle and the reasons why she doesn't already have one.
G's grandmother, who looks after her extensively, has also been approached in the past by TV shows that are designed to support those with physical and mental conditions. The family has found it difficult to accept their offers of support due to the reporting restrictions in place, because we have been prohibited from explaining why we need certain help following decisions made by the court. Lifting the RRO can therefore only be in [G]'s best interests as it would potentially allow her to access experiences that can enhance her life whereas it is currently preventing it."
"Good afternoon
I'm getting in touch from the Sunday Mirror to see if you would be able to comment on a story we are looking at for this weekend. It is in relation to the ongoing care of G who has been a patient at [A NHS Trust] for almost 14 years.
We understand there was a court hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice last month where Mr Justice Hayden ruled she should be moved to a nursing home. This is against the wishes of her parents who would like to take G home where, they say, they can care for her in a loving, family environment. They believe their views and wishes have been disregarded by medical staff who started making arrangements to move G to a home without consulting them. They have been totally devoted to their daughter and have been by her side every day since she was first admitted in April 2008. They are devastated by what has happened. We have been told there is a transparency order in relation to the case - would it be possible to see a copy of this? We understand this is a difficult case and G has complex medical needs. Would it be possible to speak to someone about this?
Many thanks
PC"
"Good morning,
We are interested in running an anonymised piece about a legal case involving a long term [A NHS Trust] patient, ['G']. She has been at [A NHS Trust] since 2008, mainly in HDU. However, my understanding is that she is stable and has been medically fit for discharge for a long time. There has been a very longstanding disagreement between, on the one hand, her parents, and on the other, [A NHS Trust] and [M CCG], as to where she should be discharged to. Her parents have been arguing that their daughter should be discharged to an adapted family home, where they would care for her, supported by a very intensive package of domiciliary care. [A NHS Trust] / [M CCG] has been arguing for [G] to be discharged to a nursing home. I understand this ongoing dispute is the principal reason why [G] has remained in [A NHS Trust] for many years without being discharged. The case was heard in October and December at the Court of Protection where a judge ordered that she be discharged to a nursing home.
Her parents do not agree with this decision at all, for various reasons. I am aware that the judge put in place what is called a 'Transparency Order', which prohibits publication of 'any material or information that identifies or is likely to identify' [G] or her family, 'directly or indirectly', in relation to the proceedings. However, we believe that, with care, the facts of this case can be reported while maintaining the patient's and her family's anonymity. I would not, for instance, be referring to her as [G], but as 'P' as mentioned in the Transparency Order.]
I am writing because:
- I want to check the basic facts of the situation – as outlined above - with the [A NHS Trust] / [M CCG], and;
- I want to know the [A NHS Trust] / [M CCG's] joint position as to why they believe a nursing home is the best place for [G] / P. If someone could get in touch with me today, I would be most grateful.
Yours sincerely
S A
Medical Editor"
".. [LF] could not identify the balance that requires to be struck between the two alternative plans. The door was simply closed in his mind to any advantages that the Home might have to offer or, more importantly, how a full assessment of [G's] needs, outside the hospital setting might ultimately strengthen the prospects of a reunification with her family. That does not bode well for the future, but I hope will not be a blockade to the objective that [LF] truly desires."
"I think I might be famous soon… please follow my story and invite your friends too"
"First, neither article has as such precedence over the other. Secondly, where the values under the two articles are in conflict, an intense focus on the comparative importance of the specific rights being claimed in the individual case is necessary. Thirdly, the justifications for interfering with or restricting each right must be taken into account. Finally, the proportionality test must be applied to each."
Thus, the first stage is to identify what the competing rights and interests are which fall to be balanced. In the balancing exercise, there must be a fundamental recognition that what is required is a parallel analysis of the competing rights in issue, in which neither right has precedence. The exercise is therefore one of evaluating evidential weight. The outcome will depend on which right establishes qualitatively greater evidence. Critical to this exercise is a recognition of the fact that the transparency order is there to protect the subject matter of the proceedings, it does not exist to confer general or diverse rights of anonymity. For the avoidance of doubt, and because it has recently been argued in another case, there is no preliminary threshold requiring an applicant to show "good reason" for relaxing the anonymity conferred by an RRO. Explicitly, paragraph 2.4 of Practice Direction 4C, creates no such requirement. Such would, in any event, be irreconcilable with the approach in Re S (supra).