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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 >> Crossman v St George's Healthcare NHS Trust [2016] EWHC 2878 (QB) (25 November 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/2878.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 2878 (QB) |
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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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RODNEY CROSSMAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ST GEORGE'S HEALTHCARE NHS TRUST |
Defendant |
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John Whitting QC (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2nd, 3rd & 4th November 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Peter Hughes QC:
Introduction
The facts
"We discussed different options. The plan is for him to try conservative treatment first. I would be grateful if you could arrange some physiotherapy locally. He might also try a chiropractor himself. Will see him again in three months' time. If his symptoms persist despite conservative management, we can proceed with a cervical foraminotomy[2]. This procedure has a 90% chance of abolishing his arm problems versus 2% to 3% chance of complications including nerve injury, wound infection and in his case deep vein thrombosis. He will have to stop the Warfarin for a week before the surgery and only restart it three days after the surgery[3].
We will make a final decision during the next appointment."
"I particularly remember the contents of my discussion with Mr Crossman because he was very annoyed and upset by the suggestion that the surgery could be delayed, even though the delay was not caused by any fault on the part of the clinical team. Usually when patients are given firm advice to postpone their operation they accept that advice, but Mr Crossman did not accept the advice which he had been given, but was adamant that he warned to proceed with surgery that day which is very unusual."
Breach of Duty
i) there was a negligent failure to follow the plan for conservative management with physiotherapy and a review in the outpatient clinic thereafter;ii) Dr Thakur was negligent in not enquiring of the Claimant whether conservative management had occurred and in not discussing with Professor Papadopoulos whether the operation should be postponed for this to take place; and
iii) Mr Corns was negligent in not informing the Claimant that he should undergo conservative treatment as a first option before surgery, or that this remained the recommendation.
The Areas of Dispute
The Claimant's Evidence
"I regret not asking more questions at the time about why it seemed like they had changed their minds about physiotherapy but I just trusted them and thought that they knew best."
"Q Okay, well why didn't you mention it to Dr Thakur?
A Because I assumed that nothing had been arranged, that he had changed his mind and he put me down for surgery, because we discussed both items with both – I assumed that he has put me down, I put my trust in him, that he put me down for surgery instead of conservative management.
Q Surgery is not something to go into lightly, is it?
A It's certainly not, no.
Q Why not just simply raise it and say: well, hang on, I thought the plan was physio and then to review and if that hadn't worked out then surgery?
A I didn't raise the issue with it because when they described to me it was, it was just a small incision, that's all it was, and after that I researched that information and found it's only a small incision. There was no real risk of operation, not the surgery I had.
Q Mr Crossman, I am not interested in what you did after this assessment, I am interested in why it is when you had been called in to see a doctor about surgery, you didn't simply say to him: well, hang on, I thought the plan was for physio and for review and only then for surgery.
A Maybe I should have done, I just assumed that decision was made on my behalf."
"Q It would have been a natural thing to do to say: well, the plan had been that I was going to have physiotherapy anyway, rather than this operation.
A I suppose, yes. I could have raised it then, but I just accepted the fact that the operation was to be done to relieve the problem in my neck and it's the only answer to the problem. I suppose in the back of my mind I couldn't see how physio would benefit, because I had physio before this and that didn't benefit. So I suppose really that's why I didn't raise the issue, because physio wasn't going to benefit me."
Mr Whitting then continued –
"Q That's exactly what I was asking you before, Mr Crossman, because that made sense, you tried it before, it hadn't worked –
A I suppose, it makes sense in that respect, yes.
Q And that's why you didn't insist on having it?
A Because we had already tried physio before this, before this had even come to the doctors and it hadn't worked.
Q Okay, and that's why you didn't raise it?
A I suppose in the back of my mind, yes."
Discussion
"….an approach which requires the patient to question the doctor disregards the social and psychological realities of the relationship between a patient and her doctor, whether in the time-pressured setting of a GP's surgery, or in the setting of a hospital. Few patients do not feel intimidated or inhibited to some degree."
Medical Causation
"The literature which we have provides no firm understanding of why radicular injury occurs in the tiny subgroup of patients in whom it does occur. We only know that there [are] a number of different potential causes of such injury in different ways. For this reason, it is likely that if the operation had been carried out on a different occasion, on the balance of probabilities, any of the factors as explained above could have presented differently and the injury would not have occurred."
"I can see no reason why the Claimant would not have had exactly the same outcome from his surgery had he had the operation three months [later]. Mr Todd and I have agreed …. that the reason for the Claimant's outcome from his surgery is probably a result of manipulation of the nerve root and residual lateral canal stenosis. In my opinion, whilst this would not have been predictable pre-operatively, this would have occurred whenever the Claimant had had his operation, so would have occurred had his operation occurred three months [later]".
"We usually do not know the cause of nerve root injury and that is probably because there are several different interacting causes which on a particular occasion come together to cause the harm. It is probably not the same combination of causes on different occasions. Mr Byrne and I have agreed that the most significant causes were the residual stenosis and manipulation of a swollen nerve root. In my opinion it is unlikely that the same degree of residual stenosis would have been present on a different occasion, more likely there would have been no residual stenosis.
Nerve root swelling has a cause or causes. A nerve root may be swollen because of a primary compressive pathology. Swelling may be caused, or exacerbated by the surgical procedure. Intraoperative causes include the position of the patient on the table, traumatic injury from a surgical instrument, excessive manipulation of the nerve root, use of a bipolar diathermy (to stop bleeding) close to the nerve root, a transient drop in the blood pressure and no doubt causes we do not understand. In my opinion it is improbable that the cause, or a combination of causes, that caused the nerve root injury in this case would have occurred on a different occasion."
"Q So are you actually saying that, given those two factors, if they are the attributable cause of the continuing symptoms, that on the balance of probabilities the outcome had been the same in any event?"
A. I am saying that, yes, my Lord."
Legal Causation
"justice requires that Miss Chester be afforded the remedy which she seeks, as the injury which she suffered at the hands of Mr Afshar was within the scope of the very risk which he should have warned her about when he was obtaining her consent to the operation which resulted in that injury."
(paragraph 88). Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe said that without some extension of existing principle "the surgeon's important duty would in many cases be drained of its content."
"by providing for the payment of potentially very large damages by a defendant whose violation of that right is not shown to have worsened the physical condition of the claimant."
(paragraph 9). Lord Hoffman said that he could see a case for a modest award of compensation where a patient had not been appropriately warned of the risks "to vindicate the patient's right to choose for herself", but he felt that the law of torts was "an unsuitable vehicle for distributing the modest compensation which might be payable." (paragraphs 32-34).
Result
Note 1 Neuroforaminal encroachment occurs when the nerve passageways in the spine constrict on one or both sides of the spine. It is also known as foraminal or spinal stenosis.
2 A cervical foraminotomy is an operation to relieve pressure on a compressed cervical nerve root by removing excess bone formed over time by wear and tear. [Back] Note 3 The Claimant has familial Leiden Factor Five, a genetic blood clotting disorder, which is treated with anti-coagulant medication
4 INR – International Normalised Ratio – a measure of assessment of the blood’s ability to coagulate [Back] Note 5 A laminectomy is a surgical procedure to remove a portion of the vertebral bone called the lamina [Back]