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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Gerrard & Anor v. Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh NHS Trust [2002] ScotCS 11 (11th January, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2002/11.html Cite as: [2002] ScotCS 11 |
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Gerrard & Anor v. Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh NHS Trust [2002] ScotCS 11 (11th January, 2002)
OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
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A120/01
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OPINION OF LADY PATON in the cause (First) MARGARET BROWN GERRARD (Assisted Person) and (Second) RAYMOND ALEXANDER WADDELL GERRARD (Assisted Person) Pursuers; against ROYAL INFIRMARY OF EDINBURGH NHS TRUST Defenders:
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Pursuers: Hajducki Q.C., Summers; Campbell Smith W.S.
Defenders: J.R. Campbell Q.C., D.B. Ross; Scottish Health Service Central Legal Office
11 January 2002
"In the event of the defenders being found liable to make reparation to the pursuers in respect of the death of Sandy referred to on record, the amount of each pursuer's loss, injury and damage is £12,500 inclusive of interest to date upon which interest should be applied at the rate of eight per cent a year from the date of decree until payment."
The issues in dispute were therefore (i) whether there had been any professional negligence, and if so, (ii) whether that negligence had caused or contributed to Sandy's death.
The senior registrar
History of the pregnancy
"4.15 p.m. I have explained that vaginal delivery is in the best interests of mother and babies unless any complication arises. Margaret and her partner seem to have accepted this. In view of VE [vaginal examination] findings today and the fact that the head seems to be in the brim she may be going into labour. For repeat VE early this evening and ARM [artificial rupture of the membranes] if cx [cervix] 5 + cms. dilated."
Delivery of the first twin
"No sign of being in 2nd stage [of labour] - coping well breathing thro' contractions - not actively expulsive. CTGs [cardiotocographs] x 2 continue, difficult to be sure that they are separate at times, other moments definitely picking up two separate FHRs [foetal heart rates]. Requesting analgesia."
Pain relief was given at 7.50 p.m.
"19.52 SVD [spontaneous vertex delivery] live boy."
The delivery was normal, unassisted, and head-first.
The second twin
Administration of syntocinon
Decision to proceed to Caesarian section
"20.10 [To] anaesthetic RM [room]. Professor Calder called."
Dr. Busby-Earle explained that she asked Dr. Howe, the registrar on duty, to summon Professor Calder. She did so for two reasons. Firstly, the professor might have decided that a manoeuvre called internal version was feasible. Such a manoeuvre is carried out where the membranes are intact, or recently ruptured. General anaesthetic is administered, and the hand inserted into the uterus and the baby pulled down by a foot or leg to allow for vaginal delivery. Secondly, it was the practice to inform the consultant in charge whenever a patient was being taken to theatre for Caesarian section.
"Findings:
Procedure: VE [vaginal examination] by Prof. Calder. Internal version not feasible - proceeded to LSCS [lower segment Caesarian section]
Expert medical evidence: gynaecologists and obstetricians
Expert medical evidence: neonatologists
Pursuers' submissions
Professional negligence
Causation
Defenders' submissions
Professional negligence
"... a judge's "preference" for one body of distinguished professional opinion to another also professionally distinguished is not sufficient to establish negligence on a practitioner whose actions have received the seal of approval of those whose opinions, truthfully expressed, honestly held, were not preferred ... For in the realm of diagnosis and treatment negligence is not established by preferring one respectable body of professional opinion to another ..."
Causation
[75] For the purposes of this chapter of his submissions, senior counsel for the defenders assumed that the entire delay was attributable to negligence on the part of Dr. Busby-Earle. Counsel submitted that it was for the pursuers to aver and prove that, but for the doctor's negligence, the baby would not have suffered in the way he did. He submitted that, at best for the pursuers, the delay began at 8.00 p.m., on the basis of a very speedy assimilation of the findings from the ultra sound scan and the vaginal examination. On Dr. Busby-Earle's evidence, the decision to stop the syntocinon and to proceed to theatre was taken at 8.08 p.m., when foetal distress was noted. At 8.08 p.m., the first pursuer's legs had to be taken out of the stirrups; she had to be placed on a trolley and moved to theatre. The element of foetal distress was important: the steps being taken to get the first pursuer to theatre were taken against that background. Had the decision to proceed to theatre been taken earlier, say at 8.00 p.m., it would have been taken in a non-emergency situation, when there was no cause for alarm. Matters might well have proceeded at a slower pace. The pursuers were in effect asking the court to speculate that a decision to proceed to Caesarian section, taken earlier in a situation of non-emergency, would necessarily have been followed by precisely the same pattern and timing of events as did in fact occur once the decision to proceed to Caesarian section was taken at 8.08 p.m. But such an assumption or speculation could not be made. For example, Professor Calder would not necessarily have arrived in the same number of minutes. There was no proper basis upon which the court could, on a balance of probabilities, hold that the sequence of events and the timing following a decision to proceed to theatre taken earlier in a situation of non-emergency, with no foetal distress, would have been the same or similar to the sequence of events and the timing following the actual decision to proceed to theatre taken once the foetal heart rate gave cause for concern at 8.08 p.m.
Whether the presenting part was engaged in the cervix or impacted in the bony pelvis
Timing of the decision to proceed to Caesarian section
Whether there was professional negligence
"To succeed in an action based on negligence, whether against a doctor or against anyone else, it is of course necessary to establish a breach of that duty to take care which the law requires, and the degree of want of care which constitutes negligence must vary with the circumstances - Caswell v Powell Duffryn Associated Collieries, per Lord Wright at pp.175-176. But where the conduct of a doctor, or indeed of any professional man, is concerned, the circumstances are not so precise and clear cut as in the normal case. In the realm of diagnosis and treatment there is ample scope for genuine difference of opinion and one man clearly is not negligent merely because his conclusion differs from that of other professional men, nor because he has displayed less skill or knowledge than others would have shown. The true test for establishing negligence in diagnosis or treatment on the part of a doctor is whether he has been proved to be guilty of such failure as no doctor of ordinary skill would be guilty of if acting with ordinary care - Glegg, Reparation (3rd ed.) p.509 ... It follows from what I have said that in regard to allegations of deviation from ordinary professional practice - and this is the matter with which the present note is concerned - such a deviation is not necessarily evidence of negligence. Indeed it would be disastrous if this were so, for all inducement to progress in medical science would then be destroyed. Even a substantial deviation from normal practice may be warranted by the particular circumstances. To establish liability by a doctor where deviation from normal practice is alleged, three facts require to be established. First of all it must be proved that there is a usual and normal practice; secondly it must be proved that the defender has not adopted that practice; and thirdly (and this is of crucial importance) it must be established that the course the doctor adopted is one which no professional man of ordinary skill would have taken if he had been acting with ordinary care. There is clearly a heavy onus on a pursuer to establish these three facts, and without all three his case will fail. If this is the test, then it matters nothing how far or how little he deviates from the ordinary practice. For the extent of deviation is not the test. The deviation must be of a kind which satisfies the third of the requirements just stated ..."
"... a deviation [from ordinary professional practice] is not necessarily evidence of negligence ... it matters nothing how far or how little [a doctor] deviates from ordinary practice. For the extent of the deviation is not the test. The deviation must be of a kind which satisfies the [requirement that the course the doctor adopted is one which no professional man of ordinary skill would have taken if he had been acting with ordinary care]."
Causation
"Post-mortem examination showed that the cause of Sandy's death was intrapartum asphyxia that is a severe lack of oxygen during labour and delivery. The probable causes of this oxygen starvation were either or both of the following. The entanglement or compression of Sandy's umbilical cord as Raymond moved down the first pursuer's birth canal prior to the first delivery. The reduction of size of the placental bed following upon the birth of Raymond. That is, as Raymond was delivered the first pursuer's uterus reduced in size leading to shrinkage of the area of its wall supporting Sandy's placenta. Both of those mechanisms are likely to reduce a second twin's oxygen supply ..."
However in the course of the proof before answer, no medical witness was able to explain the precise cause of the oxygen starvation.
Firstly, although the second twin's foetal distress became manifest to medical staff only at 8.08 p.m. when the foetal heart rate was noted as "difficult to pick up", the process of prolonged partial asphyxia probably commenced at least twenty five minutes before Sandy's birth at 8.31 p.m.
Conclusion