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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Blackpool Borough Council v HT (A Minor) & Ors [2022] EWHC 1480 (Fam) (17 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2022/1480.html Cite as: [2023] 1 FLR 100, (2022) 188 BMLR 170, (2022) 25 CCL Rep 429, [2022] EWHC 1480 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Blackpool Borough Council |
Applicant |
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HT (A Minor by her Children's Guardian) |
First Respondent |
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CT |
Second Respondent |
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LT |
Third Respondent |
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Lancashire and South Cumbria NHS Foundation Trust |
Intervener |
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Miss Bentley (instructed by RRF Solicitors) for the First Respondent
The Second and Third Respondents appeared in Person
Ms Victoria Butler-Cole QC (instructed by Hill Dickinson) for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 11 May 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice MacDonald:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
"Given that carers are willing to take HT home, and keep supporting her in the community and there is scope to increase input from MH services, alongside a short course of medication to relieve agitation and distress that HT is currently displaying, this would provide a less restrictive option than hospital admission."
"…clinically speaking, there was at no point a supportive gatekeeping assessment and all Adolescent Psychiatric Intensive Units would be extremely reluctant to support a young person under their care if the Gatekeeping Assessment does not support an admission. The reasons for this are likely to include:
i. Admission to hospital needs to be a last resort, where no other options are available. This is in line with the Guiding principles, in particular the principle of 'Least restrictive option and maximising independence' which states: "Where it is possible to treat a patient safely and lawfully without detaining them under the Act, the patient should not be detained' (para 1.2). Where there is an identified alternative community option, as was the case here, admission would be contrary to this principle.
ii. Admission to Hospital needs to have a clear purpose. Again this is in line with the Guiding principles, in particular the principle of 'Purpose and effectiveness' which states: "Care plans for detained patients should focus on maximising recovery and ending detention as soon as possible" When considered together this indicates a requirement to clearly identify a need to be in Hospital for an identified purpose of assessment and/or treatment which cannot be delivered in the community. Here there was no clear role for Hospital based assessment or treatment identified following the gatekeeping assessment, which identified that HT's clinical presentation was consistent and unchanged so as to warrant further assessment and the interventions required could not only be provided in the community, but it would be of benefit to HT to remain in with her current care team, having regard to her difficulties building therapeutic trusting relationships central to effective care and support.
iii. Without any identified purpose for Hospital based assessment or treatment, HT would likely quickly have been identified as not meeting the criteria for detention under the MHA and being discharged. This would only have had the effect of disrupting HT's care and support provision without achieving any positive outcome for HT.
iv. Concerns related to increasing incidents of young people being detained on Sections of the Mental Health Act, when in crisis, which is quickly resolved however, CYP's finding themselves being stuck in hospital as delayed discharge secondary to a lack of appropriate discharge provision in the community. This having a damaging effect on those CYP by being accommodated in an inappropriate environment unnecessarily and exposed to commonly referred to 'side effects of admission' due to being accommodated in an environment with CYP with significant and enduring mental illnesses."
"49. I have reflected on the community support provided to HT in relation to the Trust's wider obligations. The Teams have worked collaboratively to try and support HT to engage with the Community Services. HT has been offered a variety of different options to enable her to engage with this, from different professionals and services. There was a break in communication following the Mental Health Act Assessment on 17 March for which we apologise. This was rectified the same day and contact made. There were a number of MDT meetings arranged to ensure all services were involved including HT's care team. Communication arranged to keep HT involved identifying the best placed person, even as this changed. The Consultant Psychiatrist for Darwen CMHT, Dr Adelekan, was not involved actively in the MDT meeting however there was medical representation at the MDT meting to support the decision making process. As can be seen from the chronology above, the Trust has arranged and implemented a range of support services for HT since mid-March 2022 when the decision was made not to detain her under the MHA.
50. The CMHT consider that HT would benefit in the future from psychological therapy, looking initially at skills work through DBT and then reviewing to identify other possibilities. However HT is currently not able to engage in psychological therapy and she does not want to. She has presented with emotional lability, self harming behaviour, aggression and repeat attendances, and the support that has been offered is designed to help achieve a phase of stability, so that she can be in the best possible place to then access and engage with further and more long term support from CMHT. HT's care team within her placement and her Social workers are already supporting her in relation to this and will continue to do so."
THE LAW
"Tier 4 Commissioners will liaise with CCGs and Local Authorities (LA) to ensure that there are no gaps in the pathway. Many young people requiring Tier 4 interventions also have significant social care and/or educational needs and these are best met through robust collaboration between agencies."
"[61] In particular, the shortage of appropriate resources increases the risk that the decisions regarding the welfare of children will be driven primarily by expediency, with the welfare principle relegated to a poor second place. Within the context of secure accommodation, the local authority and the court must each consider whether the proposed placement would safeguard and promote the child's welfare (see Re B (Secure Accommodation Order) [2019] EWCA Civ 2025). When considering whether to grant an order authorising the deprivation of a child's liberty the court must treat the child's best interests as its paramount consideration. Where a local authority or a court is placed in a position of having to approve a placement because it is the only option available it is obvious that these cardinal principles will be at risk of being undermined. Yet this is the situation that local authorities and courts are forced to grapple with everyday up and down the country by the continuing shortage of appropriate resources and as highlighted repeatedly in the authorities that I have referred to above and more widely by the Children's Commissioner for England."
"[2] In what will be a scenario now depressingly familiar to those in the habit of reading on BAILII judgments given by High Court judges and deputy High Court judges in cases of this nature, and within the context of acute emotional and behavioural difficulties consequent on past abuse, Y has been assessed as not meeting the relevant criteria for detention under ss 2 or 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983 (the 1983 Act) as he is not considered to be suffering from a mental disorder. At the same time, the therapeutic treatment within a restrictive clinical environment for acute behavioural and emotional issues arising from past trauma that he does urgently require is simply unavailable."
"Tier 4 inpatient CAMHS services in England offer care at four levels to support the effective management of differing nature of risk presented by children and young people who are under 18 years:
... Medium secure services accommodate young people with mental and neurodevelopmental disorders (including learning disability and autism) who present with the highest levels of risk of harm to others including those who have committed grave crimes.
... Low secure services accommodate young people with mental and neurodevelopmental disorders at lower but significant levels of physical, relational and procedural security. Young people may belong to one of two groups: those with 'forensic' presentations involving significant risk of harm to others and those with 'complex non-forensic' presentations principally associated with behaviour that challenges, self-harm and vulnerability.
... Psychiatric Intensive Care Units (PICU) manage short-term behavioural disturbance which cannot be contained within a Tier 4 CAMHS general adolescent service. Behaviour will include serious risk of either suicide, absconding with a significant threat to safety, aggression or vulnerability due to agitation or sexual disinhibition. Levels of physical, relational and procedural security should be similar to those in low security.
... General adolescent services provide inpatient care without the need for enhanced physical or procedural security measures."
"14.78 Clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) are responsible for commissioning mental health services to meet the needs of their areas. Under section 140 of the Act, CCGs have a duty to notify local authorities in their areas of arrangements which are in force for the reception of patients in cases of special urgency or the provision of appropriate accommodation or facilities specifically designed for patients under the age of 18. The arrangements should include details of which providers in their area can receive patients in cases of special urgency and provide accommodation or facilities designed to be specifically suitable for patients under the age of 18. CCGs should provide a list of hospitals and their specialisms to local authorities which will help inform AMHPs as to where these hospitals are. This should in turn help inform AMHPs as to where beds are available in these circumstances if they are needed.
14.79 The NHS Commissioning Board (known as NHS England) is responsible for the commissioning of secure mental health services and other specialist services. NHS commissioners should work with providers to ensure that procedures are in place through which beds can be identified whenever required."
"1 Application of Act: "mental disorder".
(1) The provisions of this Act shall have effect with respect to the reception, care and treatment of mentally disordered patients, the management of their property and other related matters.
(2) In this Act—
"mental disorder" means any disorder or disability of the mind; and "mentally disordered" shall be construed accordingly;
and other expressions shall have the meanings assigned to them in section 145 below.
(2A) But a person with learning disability shall not be considered by reason of that disability to be—
(a) suffering from mental disorder for the purposes of the provisions mentioned in subsection (2B) below; or
(b) requiring treatment in hospital for mental disorder for the purposes of sections 17E and 50 to 53 below,
unless that disability is associated with abnormally aggressive or seriously irresponsible conduct on his part.
(2B) The provisions are—
(a) sections 3, 7, 17A, 20 and 20A below;
(b) sections 35 to 38, 45A, 47, 48 and 51 below; and
(c) section 72(1)(b) and (c) and (4) below.
(3) Dependence on alcohol or drugs is not considered to be a disorder or disability of the mind for the purposes of subsection (2) above."
"2.4 Mental disorder is defined for the purposes of the Act as "any disorder or disability of the mind". Relevant professionals should determine whether a patient has a disorder or disability of the mind in accordance with good clinical practice and accepted standards of what constitutes such a disorder or disability."
Paragraph 2.5 goes on to state that examples of clinically recognised conditions which could fall within this definition include autistic spectrum disorders (including Asperger's syndrome) and behavioural and emotional disorders of children and young people. Paragraph 2.5 of the Code of Practice makes clear that the list of clinically recognised conditions that could fall within the definition contained within s. 1 of the 1983 Act is not exhaustive.
"19.5 … the developmental process from childhood to adulthood, particularly during adolescence, involves significant changes in a wide range of areas, such as physical, emotional and cognitive development – these factors need to be taken into account, in addition to the child and young person's personal circumstances, when assessing whether a child or young person has a mental disorder …"
"As the Law Commission reports [in Liability for Psychiatric Illness, No 249 (1998) HC 525], the distinction "is not clear", quoting one medical consultee who suggested that the "overlap between mental health and illness is so large a grey area that it is not suitable for the legal purpose to which the diagnosis is being put". The classifications in DSM-IV and ICD-10 were not themselves always sufficient "to distinguish those with the greatest impairment of functioning", and several of the consultees commented that it would be unjust to rely on the criteria in these classifications to distinguish psychiatric illness from "mere mental distress". It was suggested that some did not "reflect the complexities of the psychological impact of trauma", and the current categorisation might exclude some diagnoses which were generally acceptable. Observations like these confirm that current understanding of the workings of the mind is less than complete."
"There is a gatekeeping process ('Access Assessment') which is there to determine what type of bed (i.e. General Adolescent Unit (GAU), Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU), Low Secure Unit (LSU), Medium Secure Unit (MSU) etc) is required for the admission. The assessment also has the function of providing a necessary layer of clinical evaluation about whether admission to hospital is warranted at all, in line with the MHA Code of Practice, provided by those who work within Tier 4 CAMHS inpatient services."
And
"The gatekeeping assessment is required by commissioners and is a safeguard (as supported by NHSE) to help prevent inappropriate / unsafe admissions and ensure that any decisions to admit children and young people (CYP) to hospital are not taken lightly, that the least restrictive principle is adhered to and the decisions are underpinned by an age appropriate assessment conducted by those with CYP experience."
"Prior to admission an assessment must be completed by a CAMHS Consultant Psychiatrist or Specialist Trainee (ST4-6) in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (in consultation with a CAMHS Consultant), or a senior experienced nurse or senior psychologist in consultation with a Consultant Psychiatrist."
"The service accepts referrals meeting the following criteria:
... Primary diagnosis of mental illness including young people with neurodevelopmental disorders including mild learning disability and autism, drug and alcohol problems, physical disabilities, or those with social care problems as secondary needs
... Severe and complex needs that cannot be safely managed within Tier 3 CAMHS
... Aged 13 years until 18th birthday (there may be rare cases of 12 year olds being more appropriately admitted than to a Tier 4 CAMHS Children's Unit)
... May require detention under the Mental Health Act although not a pre-requisite."
"Exclusion criteria
... Over 18 years of age (unless this is for a short time period to complete an episode of care and appropriate safeguards are in place).
... Young people with a moderate or severe learning disability unless considered to be in their best interests and they would be able to benefit from general adolescent Tier 4 service intervention ( Young people with a primary diagnosis of substance misuse.
... Young people with a primary diagnosis of conduct disorder and no co-morbid mental disorder.
... Young people whose primary need is for accommodation due the breakdown of family or other placement.
... Young people who are in need of Tier 4 CAMHS Low Secure or Tier 4 CAMHS Medium Secure care.
... Young people who are currently in secure settings (including secure welfare placements) provided by local authorities or Youth Justice, who in the first instance would be referred to the Tier 4 CAMHS Medium Secure or a Low Secure Unit.
... Young people who are deaf where care may be more appropriately be 6 provided by the National Deaf CAMHS service.
... Young people with severe autism where it is clinically assessed that care would be more appropriately provided by a specialist unit."
DISCUSSION
"As outlined within the chronology, a multi-agency meeting was held on the 21 March 2022 and the challenges were discussed in relation to the situation at that time. Two doctors and an AMPH (sic) advised that HT required hospital admission, however gatekeeping within Tier 4 CAMHS (The Cove) did not agree. The legality is that if an AMPH (sic) determines this then action should be taken to find a bed however gate keeping say it is their policy that they follow their own assessment and their assessment is that she does not require admission, this is an ongoing challenge found within the service."
"[71] In circumstances where it is rarely, if ever, the case that a particular welfare option will meet perfectly all of a given child's welfare needs, safeguarding and promoting a child's best interests will almost invariably involve a degree of compromise. The extent to which a given welfare compromise is or is not acceptable will in turn depend, in part, on whether or not another welfare option that does not require such a compromise is or is not available. A course of action that can meet some of the child's needs may well not be acceptable where a course of action that meets all of the child's needs is available. But where a course of action that meets all of the child's needs is not available, a course that meets only some of the child's needs may become acceptable, particularly where the alternative is that none of the child's welfare needs will be met. Thus, for example, a placement that keeps a child physically safe from sexual exploitation but lacks appropriate therapeutic provision to address sexual trauma may not be in a child's best interests where a safe placement with therapeutic provision is available. However, a placement that keeps a child safe from sexual exploitation but lacks appropriate therapeutic provision may, depending on the facts of the case, be capable of being held to be in a child's best interests where a safe placement with therapeutic provision is not available, particularly in the shorter term whilst further searches are made and where otherwise the safety of the child would be threatened.
[72] In these circumstances, whilst not determinative, I am satisfied that the lack of availability of any alternative course of action with respect to welfare is one factor to be taken into account in evaluating properly the extent to which in it is in L's best interests for the court to authorise the current restrictions that I am satisfied constitute a deprivation of his liberty. I accept that, where the merit of the sole placement available is limited to keeping the child safe in the broadest sense, taking into account the unavailability of alternatives risks the welfare outcome arrived at being one that is based on an undesirably narrow welfare formulation that can come closer to a test of necessity than a test of best interests. As this court recognised in Lancashire County Council v G (Continuing Unavailability of Regulated Placement) (No 4) [2021] EWHC 244 (Fam) at [30]:
'The judgment of the Supreme Court in the appeal against the decision of the Court of Appeal in T (A Child) [2018] EWCA Civ 2136 is awaited. However, as in previous judgments, in the foregoing circumstances I am again left asking myself whether, where there remains, six months after the commencement of proceedings, only one sub-optimal, unregulated placement option open to the court, the court is really exercising its welfare jurisdiction by reference to G's best interests if it chooses that one option, or if the court simply being forced by necessity to make an order irrespective of welfare considerations. If the latter, then it is difficult to see how the decision I have made can be lawful by reference to the current law governing the use of the inherent jurisdiction to authorise the deprivation of a child's liberty.'
[73] However, and with a degree of weary resignation, I further accept Mr Carey's submission that the welfare analysis of the court has to be realistic and not idealistic in its approach and, accordingly, pending any revision to the current law the court simply has no choice but to grapple as best it can, within the best interests paradigm, with the reality of the ongoing paucity of appropriate resources for children who do not meet the criteria for detention and treatment under the Mental Health Act 1983, but nonetheless require urgent assessment and therapeutic treatment for acute behavioural and emotional issues within a restrictive clinical environment by reason of their past traumas.
[74] Accordingly, the question of whether it is in L's best interests for the court to authorise the current restrictions that I am satisfied constitute a deprivation of his liberty falls to be answered in the clear eyed knowledge that his current arrangement is the only one presently available. The child's welfare needs must be considered both holistically and realistically, which approach demands that the court consider the likely consequences of any order it does or does not make. Within that context, to leave out of the best interests equation the lack of availability of an alternative course of action with respect to L's welfare would be to artificially constrain the court from evaluating fully the extent to which it is in L's best interests for the court to authorise the current restrictions that constitute a deprivation of his liberty."
CONCLUSION