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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Savage v South Essex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust [2010] EWHC 865 (QB) (28 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/865.html Cite as: [2010] HRLR 24, [2010] EWHC 865 (QB), [2010] PIQR P14, [2010] MHLR 311, [2010] UKHRR 838, [2010] Med LR 292 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Anna Savage |
Claimant |
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South Essex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust |
Defendant |
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Mr Edward Bishop (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22-26, 30 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mackay:
The facts
Trust Policy
The Expert Evidence
The Defendants' Evidence
The Law
"In my view it is abundantly clear that, where there is a real and immediate risk of a patient committing suicide, article 2 imposes an operational obligation on the medical authorities to do all that can reasonable be expected of them to prevent it."
and he added (at paragraph 72):-
"The operational obligation arises only if members of staff know or ought to know that a particular patient presents a "real and immediate risk" of suicide. In these circumstances article 2 requires them to all that can reasonably be expected to prevent the patient from committing suicide. If they fail to do this not only will they and the health authorities be liable in negligence but there will also be a violation of the operational obligation under Article 2 to protect the patient's life. This is comparable to the position in Osman's case 29 EHRR 245 and Keenan's case 33 EHRR 913."
"…the positive protection obligation under Article 2 is generally an obligation to have proper systems in place. But in some circumstances an operational duty to protect a particular individual is triggered. The latter duty is not engaged by ordinary medical negligence alone. [Counsel for the claimant] is not arguing for any less demanding test than the test derived from Osman's case….and Keenan's case…. He accepts that this is a different and more stringent test than ordinary medical negligence. For my part I have little doubt that it is right in principle to apply the approach adopted in Osman's case and Keenan's case to patients detained in hospital under the Mental Health Act 1983 as it applies to persons detained under other powers in other institutions."
"The test of real an immediate risk is one not easily satisfied, the threshold being high, and I would for my part accept that a court should not likely find that a public authority has violated one of an individual's fundamental rights or freedoms, thereby ruling, as such a finding necessarily does, that the United Kingdom has violated an important international convention"
Lord Hope in Van Colle at paragraph 67 and 68 said in three places that the threat must be "imminent". He added that the test was in clear terms and provides an objective test which requires no further explanation. While therefore the original source for the interpretation of the test must be the ECtHR cases themselves I consider that the views of their Lordships in these two recent domestic decisions, explaining what the European jurisprudence amounts to, are important and influential on my decision.
"… the immediacy of the danger to life means that, for the time being, there is in practice little room for considering other, more general matters concerning his treatment. There will be time enough for them, if and when the danger to life has been overcome. In the meantime, the authorities' duty is to try to prevent the suicide".
Application of the test to the evidence in this case
(1) She had been assessed as a suicide risk in October 2001 and had made a significant attempt to kill herself. She had also absconded several times during this course of treatment. Only one nurse thought she knew about this history; all other members of the team were ignorant of it because they had not made it their business to study her history;
(2) Before going to Beckton she had broken a window, requiring restraint;
(3) At Beckton she had tried twice to climb out of a window, in apparent response to command hallucinations;
(4) There was no proper risk assessment or consideration of the appropriate level of observations after her admission to Chalkwell ward, or any review of these after her two expressions of suicidal ideation and four attempts at absconding, or the consequences of any future successful attempt to abscond; the assumption that all she was attempting to do was to go home was superficial and could not be made with any confidence;
(5) At all times in the last two months of her detention she was known to be in psychological terms in the state accepted by Dr Ague and set out above, as was plain from a proper reading of the nursing notes; there was no basis for any conclusion that her condition was improving in any meaningful sense.
Is the claimant a victim?
"For the purposes of this Section, a person is a victim of an unlawful act only if he would be a victim for the purposes of Article 34 of the convention if proceedings were brought in the European Court of human rights in respect of that act"
Article 34 itself merely states:-
"The court may receive applications from any person… claiming to be the victim of a violation by one of the High contracting Parties of the rights set forth in the convention…"
The question of victim status, therefore, can only be settled by looking at other decisions of the ECtHR.
Relief