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England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Family Court Decisions (High Court Judges) >> C (A Child), Re [2015] EWFC 79 (29 September 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWFC/HCJ/2015/79.html Cite as: [2015] Fam Law 4577, [2015] EWFC 79, [2015] Med LR 531, [2016] 3 FCR 581, [2017] 1 FLR 82, (2016) 151 BMLR 122 |
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Sitting at the Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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In the Matter of C (A Child) | ||
(Application by Dr X and Y) |
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Mr Matthew Haynes (instructed by The Smith Partnership) for C's children's guardian
Mr Nicholas Bowen QC and Mr Jonathan Price (instructed by Farleys Solicitors LLP) for C's mother
Miss Heather Emmerson (instructed by Lettie Smythers) for the General Medical Council
Mr Alistair MacDonald QC and Mr Stephen Abberley (instructed by the local authority) for the local authority
Hearing date: 13 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division :
Background
The application
"Disclosure is sought of all the documents listed below, to enable there to be full transparency of the circumstances leading up to the placement of the child and mother at [the Clinic], their assessment at [the Clinic], the termination of the placement there and subsequent events."
"to enable [Dr X and Y] to have the original source material upon the basis of which they can discuss openly, orally and in written material, their experiences and Dr [X] in particular as a single joint expert in family court proceedings."
The skeleton went on to make clear that:
"it is not their intention to provide the documents to any third party, merely to have the source material available should anyone question the veracity of any statement made by them and to confirm what has been said by others. The documents would neither be given nor shown to a third party but might, in the event of challenge, be quoted from that original source material, the name of the child always being redacted but not those of [various specified professionals, including Dr Z]."
Mr Alistair MacDonald QC, on behalf of the local authority, characterised this as amounting to the claim that Dr X should be enabled to make disclosure of what he selects, to whom he selects, at a time he selects and without the intervention of either the court or the parties.
The legal context
The legal context: the common law
"It has never been doubted that the circumstances here were such as to impose on Dr Egdell a duty of confidence owed to W. He could not lawfully sell the contents of his report to a newspaper … Nor could he, without a breach of the law as well as professional etiquette, discuss the case in a learned article or in his memoirs or in gossiping with friends, unless he took appropriate steps to conceal the identity of W."
"There appears to be no authority on the point. On principle I think that the qualifications can be classified under four heads: (a) Where disclosure is under compulsion by law; (b) where there is a duty to the public to disclose; (c) where the interests of the bank require disclosure; (d) where the disclosure is made by the express or implied consent of the customer."
"equally applies in certain other confidential relations, such as counsel or solicitor and client, or doctor and patient."
W v Egdell [1990] Ch 359 is a well-known example of Bankes LJ's qualification (b) in the medical context.
"If a patient sues a doctor or makes a complaint about him, for example to the Health Services Ombudsman or the GMC, he would no doubt be taken to waive confidentiality to the extent necessary to enable the doctor to defend himself. However, the General Medical Council's supplementary guidance, Confidentiality: Responding to criticism in the press (September 2009) warns that doctors should not disclose confidential information for the purpose of conducting a dispute with a patient in the media."
"2 Doctors are sometimes criticised in the press by their patients [a footnote explains that "In this guidance, 'patient' is used to refer to both current and former patients"] or by someone their patients have a close personal relationship with. The criticism can include inaccurate or misleading details of the doctor's diagnosis, treatment or behaviour.
3 Although this can be frustrating or distressing, it does not relieve you of your duty to respect your patient's confidentiality. Disclosures of patient information without consent can undermine the public's trust in the profession as well as your patient's trust in you. You must not put information you have learned in confidence about a patient in the public domain without that patient's express consent.
4 Disputes between patients and doctors conducted in the media often serve no practical purpose; they can prolong or intensify conflict and may undermine public confidence in the profession, even if they do not involve the disclosure of personal information without consent. You should usually limit your public response to press reports to an explanation of your legal and professional duty of confidentiality."
The legal context: the Convention
"the protection of … medical data, is of fundamental importance to a person's enjoyment of his or her right to respect for private and family life as guaranteed by Article 8 of the Convention. Respecting the confidentiality of health data is a vital principle in the legal systems of all the Contracting Parties to the Convention. It is crucial not only to respect the sense of privacy of a patient but also to preserve his or her confidence in the medical profession and in the health services in general.
Without such protection, those in need of medical assistance may be deterred from revealing such information of a personal and intimate nature as may be necessary in order to receive appropriate treatment and, even, from seeking such assistance, thereby endangering their own health and, in the case of transmissible diseases, that of the community."
"especially valid as regards protection of the confidentiality of information about a person's HIV infection. The disclosure of such data may dramatically affect his or her private and family life, as well as social and employment situation, by exposing him or her to opprobrium and the risk of ostracism. For this reason it may also discourage persons from seeking diagnosis or treatment and thus undermine any preventive efforts by the community to contain the pandemic. The interests in protecting the confidentiality of such information will therefore weigh heavily in the balance in determining whether the interference was proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued. Such interference cannot be compatible with Article 8 of the Convention unless it is justified by an overriding requirement in the public interest.
In view of the highly intimate and sensitive nature of information concerning a person's HIV status, any state measures compelling communication or disclosure of such information without the consent of the patient call for the most careful scrutiny on the part of the court, as do the safeguards designed to secure an effective protection."
In the present case, I am concerned primarily with medical data relating to the mother's mental health, but one cannot ignore the societal reality of the stigmatising effects of mental illness. So, where the medical data relates to the patient's mental health it will, as where it relates to the patient's sexual health, demand a relatively high degree of protection: see Re N (Family Proceedings: Disclosure) [2009] EWHC 1663 (Fam), [2009] 2 FLR 1152.
"typically what will be required is:
(i) the maintenance of the confidentiality of the documents themselves – the documents should not be read into the public record or otherwise put in the public domain;
(ii) the minimum public disclosure of any information derived from the documents; and
(iii) the protection of the patient's anonymity, if not in perpetuity then at any rate for a very long time indeed."
The legal context: family court practice
"placed in a position properly to defend his work. This means disclosure of his report and his release from his duties of confidentiality … simply naming him without giving him the opportunity of defending himself would, in my judgment, be the worst of all worlds. The identity of the expert criticised unheard by His Honour Judge Bellamy would be known. The criticism would be in the public domain, but the answers would not. There would be no proper debate."
"88 In my judgment, the simple identification of Dr M does not meet the exigencies of this case. Indeed, as I have already indicated, it leaves us, in my view, in the worst of all worlds. The nature of the advice, and the terms in which it was given will not be known, nor will the doctor's justification for what he said. If there is to be a debate it must be a real debate, and a real debate requires the material for the debate to be available. In my judgment, this can only be achieved by the disclosure of Dr M's report.
89 The report does, of course, identify not only the three children but also their parents and a number of the treating doctors, including their general practitioner. Although I have not heard argument on the point …, my judgment is that informed discussion of Dr M's report is not dependent upon the children being identified, and that the report should be published in redacted form, with the children remaining as X, Y and Z, and their parents remaining as 'the mother' and 'the father' respectively …
90 Dr M's report does, of course, also name a number of the treating doctors, including the children's general practitioner. This is a point which I have considered carefully, but have come to the view that these names should not be redacted. The local authority has been identified, and the GP's practice is, of course, within the local authority's area. Taking all the arguments adduced in Ward into account, I have come to the conclusion that in this respect the risk to the children being identified in the ensuing debate is minimal, and that, in this instance the European Convention, Art 10 arguments prevail over the Art 8 rights of the children."
"93 The anonymity of the child and the real risk that if the expert is identified the child will refuse to engage in the forensic process seem to me two good reasons against the disclosure of reports. But if they can be addressed, I can see little reason for a refusal to disclose the report of an expert to the world at large, either at the close of proceedings or if the facts warrant it, as the case progresses.
94 I would therefore like to see a practice develop in which expert reports would be routinely disclosed, and the media able to comment both on the report and on the use to which they were put in the proceedings. This would mean that the views of the judge on the expert evidence would also be disclosed."
"where the lack of public confidence is caused even if only in part by misunderstanding or, on occasions, the peddling of falsehoods, then … "the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence"… the remedy for such ills is not the enforced silence of judicially conferred anonymity but rather the disinfectant power of exposure to forensic sunlight."
"21 … Mr Tune is not a paedophile and X has not been sexually abused. That is the position which needs to be placed on record and in the public domain …
37 It follows, in my judgment, that the record must be put straight. How is this to be achieved? It is, I think, trite law that I have the power to release information into the public domain. Judges regularly do so, for example, when an abducted child needs to be traced … Here, of course, the situation is different. There is, however, a need to put material into the public domain. It is important for the world to know that two judges have found that Mr Tune is not a paedophile and that it is in the interests of his daughter to live with him. It is also important for me, having examined the record, having read all the papers in the case, to state that I have reached the same conclusion.
…
41 The local authority … has … prepared a document … This document has been amended by the guardian. It contains the information which, in the view of the local authority, should be in the public domain … I have taken … the opportunity to alter the document myself, to anonymise it and to expand it. It will be attached to this judgment in the form in which I have drafted it. It will then be in the public domain in the form in which I have approved it."
The submissions
The submissions: the family court documents
"to prevent the proceedings which are there to protect the child being used as an instrument of doing harm to that child."
The submissions: the GMC documents
"In respect of those documents which have not been filed in the care proceedings, there is simply no nexus between those documents and the Court's jurisdiction as the Family Court which could confer on the Court the power to adjudicate upon the proposed use of those documents. For this reason the GMC invites the Court to find that it has no jurisdiction to consider the application in so far as it relates to any documents which do not form part of the documents filed in the care proceedings."
She also questions the position of Y who, as she points out, had no direct involvement in either the care proceedings or the Fitness to Practise Panel proceedings. Y is, she submits, in no different position from any other member of the public.
Discussion: the family court documents
i) First, what is proposed is disclosure into the public domain.ii) Secondly, the application relates essentially to medical records of the most intimate and personal nature, relating in particular to the mother's mental health.
iii) Thirdly, disclosure of these materials is sought by someone who was not merely a court-appointed expert but also at one time the mother's treating clinician.
iv) Fourthly, despite what I accept are the public interest arguments that Miss Wills-Goldingham appropriately prays in aid, the application is driven in significant measure, as both her skeleton arguments and his statement make clear, by Dr X's desire to vindicate his reputation.
v) Fifthly, the extent of the disclosure sought extends far beyond anything previously permitted or even contemplated. For reasons which are apparent, what is proposed here extends far beyond what was authorised by Sir Nicholas Wall P in either Re X, Y and Z or Doncaster MBC v Haigh or what had previously been authorised in A v Ward.
vi) Sixthly, what is proposed is disclosure without any of the safeguards or protections required both by the Strasbourg jurisprudence and by domestic practice; indeed, where such safeguards and protections are simply incompatible with what is proposed.
vii) Seventhly, the disclosure sought is adamantly opposed by the mother – the patient whose records are in dispute.
viii) Eighthly, there is good reason to fear that the disclosure sought would be inimical to C's welfare.
Discussion: the GMC documents
Conclusion