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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Kituma v Nursing and Midwifery Council [2010] EWCA Civ 154 (11 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/154.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 154 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE KING)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
____________________
KITUMA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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NURSING AND MIDWIFERY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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Ms Melanie McDonald & Mr John Lucarotti (instructed by Nursing & Midwifery Council) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards:
"3. At the time of the events under investigation by the committee, the Appellant was employed as an agency midwife at the Watford General Hospital. Since 1998 the Appellant had been registered and practising as a midwife following two years training although she was registered as a nurse in 1984. Her date of birth is the 3rd of September 1960. Thus at the material times of this matter, she was some 44 years of age.
4. On the 21st of January 2004 she undertook the care of Patient D who was in labour with her first child. Patient D was at the time employed as a clinical psychologist working with offenders in a secure unit. Four of the charges of misconduct which she faced and which were found proved all related to her clinical management of the labour and delivery. Patient D had been in the care of the Appellant between 19.50 on the 21st of January 2004 and the time she, Patient D, was returned to the ward around 6 am on the 22nd of January. Delivery of patient D's daughter was at 1.10 hrs on the 22nd. Immediately before at 1.09 the Appellant had performed an episiotomy that is to say she made a cut in the perineum to enlarge the vaginal opening to facilitate the child birth. This was subsequently sutured by the Appellant, a process which according to the evidence of patient D and Mr D, took some one and a half hours.
5. The charges found proved under this first head were expressed as follows:
'That you, while contracted as an agency midwife by Watford General Hospital:
1. In the course of assisting in the labour of patient D on the 21 and 22 January 2004:
a. performed a lateral episiotomy on Patient D, rather than a medio-lateral episiotomy;
b. in the course of delivering Patient D's placenta, pulled on the umbilical chord with excessive force;
c. failed to i. notice ii. record and iii. inform colleagues that Patient D had suffered a severe post-partum haemorrhage;
d. failed to remain with patient D between the birth of her baby and the complete delivery of her placenta, contrary to trust policy and safe practice.'
6. The second head of charge related to events after complaint was made by patient D, and to the Appellant's custody of photocopies of patient D's medical and midwife's notes and of the letter of complaint which the appellant had had been given by one Nora Lucey a consultant midwife on an occasion at the hospital in June 2004 when the Appellant had attended without prior notice to address the issue of the complaint. On her own admission she subsequently left these copies on a train en route to the hospital for another meeting with Nora Lucey. Two charges were preferred under this head. The first charge (2(a)) that she had removed these documents from the hospital premises without authority or permission, was found not proved. However the charge under 2b relating to the loss of the notes was found proved by her own admission. That charge read:
'Having been notified by Watford General Hospital that Patient D had made a complaint against you following your attendance at the delivery of her child on 20 and 21 January 2004 … b. on a day between 3 June and 24 June left medical records and correspondence relating to Patient D in a public place."
Fitness to Practise
"Reasons
The facts which we have found proved demonstrate a number of serious departures from the standards established for registered midwives by the NMC's Code of Professional Conduct and the Midwives Rules and Code of Practice as in force at the material time. In particular, you failed to respect Mrs D as an individual, you failed to maintain your professional knowledge and competence and you failed to act to minimise the risk to your patient. Furthermore, you failed to protect confidential information in your possession.
The panel is particularly concerned that, both in relation to the site of the episiotomy and the post partum haemorrhage, you failed to detect a deviation from the norm and to seek appropriate assistance.
The NMC regards fitness to practise as your suitability to remain on the register without any restrictions on your practise. In arriving at our decision, we have considered very carefully the written evidence which you have submitted in relation to your clinical work since delivery of Mr and Mrs D's baby in January 2004, and the training course which you attended in March 2006. While giving appropriate weight to this evidence, the panel is seriously concerned by your obvious lack of insight into the failings demonstrated by the events in question, and your failure to accept what we have concluded are serious departures from the accepted norms and standards of practice.
For these reasons we have concluded that your fitness to practice is impaired by reason of your misconduct."
"I have already referred to the reasoning of the panel in reaching its decision that the charges found proved amounted to misconduct which impaired the Appellant's fitness to practise as midwife. Given the primacy I must give to the judgment of the specialist professional tribunal on this issue, and given I can find no basis for a finding that the panel misdirected itself on the test to be applied (namely the suitability of the Appellant to remain on the register without any restrictions on practice) or took into account extraneous matters or failed to have regard to relevant material or that the panel came to a perverse conclusion on the evidence, I can find no basis upon which this court could properly impugn this part of the decision. I have already rehearsed the evidence which in my judgment entitled the panel if it so chose to regard each of the charges as a serious departure from the applicable professional standard amounting to misconduct. Unlike in Silver, this panel did expressly take into account the Appellant's general good record both before and since the events under investigation. Nothing in the cases cited is authority in my judgment for the proposition that professional misconduct arising out of one isolated set of events (even if this be a proper characterisation of the present case which may be doubtful given the separate charge under head two) can never give rise to an adverse finding on fitness to practice. Every case must be determined on its own facts. I find nothing inappropriate in the weight this panel gave on this issue to the Appellant's lack of insight into the failings found proved against her and her failure to accept them even now, which was not a feature in the two cases relied upon by the Appellant. The committee exercising their specialist professional experience had already characterised these failings as serious departures from accepted norms and practice. The committee must in such circumstances have been entitled to regard the continuing inability of the midwife involved to accept that these failings had occurred at all or to recognize such failings for what they were, as restricting her capacity to modify her professional practice to avoid any future departure of like seriousness. As the Respondent submits 'it was precisely the fact' that 'as far as she was aware she had done nothing wrong' that was of proper concern to this panel."
"There must always be situations in which a Panel can properly conclude that the act of misconduct was an isolated error on the part of a medical practitioner and that the chance of it being repeated in the future is so remote that his or her fitness to practise has not been impaired. Indeed the Rules have been drafted on the basis that the once the Panel has found misconduct, it has to consider as a separate and discrete exercise whether the practitioner's fitness to practice has been impaired."
In the following paragraph he stated:
"It must be highly relevant in determining if a doctor's fitness to practise is impaired that first his or her conduct which led to the charge is easily remediable, second that it has been remedied and third that it is highly unlikely to be repeated."
"It seems to me that, in the light of the authorities cited, it must behoove a FTP Panel to consider facts material to the practitioner's fitness to practise looking forward and for that purpose to take into account evidence as to his present skills or lack of them and any steps taken, since the conduct criticised, to remedy any defects in skill. I accept Miss Callaghan's submission [that is, counsel for the GMC] that some elements of reputation and character may well be matters of pure mitigation, not to be taken into account at the "impairment" stage ... However, the line is a fine one and it is clear to me that evidence of a doctor's overall ability is relevant to the question of fitness to practise."
Having considered the evidence in that case, he concluded at paragraph 53:
"If proper weight had been given to the evidence of Dr Azzam's actions to remedy his deficiencies and his then current ability and skill, I consider that the Panel could not have found that his fitness to practise was still impaired as at October 2007."
"… is well regarded by her colleagues, and displays a professional, conscientious and caring attitude. From a review of the care she provided, she had demonstrated the ability to acknowledge her limitations and involve the appropriately-qualified health professional as necessary."
Sanction
"We have already announced that the facts which we have found proved demonstrate a number of serious departures from the standards established for registered midwives by the NMC's Code of Professional Conduct and the Midwives Rules and Code of Practice. We have carefully considered your previous good history, the fact that there has been no repetition of the behaviour since the incident, and the contents of the references and testimonials to which we have been referred.
Against that background, we have considered the sanctions available to us as set out in the NMC's indicative sanctions guidance.
In view of the seriousness of the case and the need to protect the public we did not consider that it would be appropriate to take no further action.
We therefore considered whether it would be appropriate to make a caution order. In deciding that such a sanction would not be appropriate, we have had to balance your previous history, the fact that there has been no repetition of the behaviour since the incident, and the contents of the references and testimonials which you have produced, against the compelling evidence of the direct harm to Mr and Mrs D as a result of the misconduct which we have found proved, your failure to make admissions in the face of overwhelming evidence, and your lack of any insight into your failings. Having considered all the evidence very carefully, we did not consider that a caution order was a sufficient sanction to deal with the severity of the misconduct and the risk to the public which it represents.
We therefore considered whether a conditions of practice order would be appropriate. We concluded that it would not, in view of the impossibility of prescribing enforceable conditions, which would protect patients during the period they are in force, and formulating appropriate and practical conditions of practice, bearing in mind that in general you have worked as an agency midwife.
We therefore considered whether a suspension order would be appropriate. We concluded that it would not, since in our view the misconduct, which we have found, proved is fundamentally incompatible with being a registered midwife.
As we have indicated, your conduct represented a serious departure from the standards, which the NMC and the public have a right to expect from a registered midwife. Your lack of insight into your failings and the serious physical and psychological consequences which those failings have clearly caused to Mrs D, and the distress caused to Mr D, in our view demonstrate that there is a continuing risk to patients should a similar situation arise again. Although we recognise the mitigation, which you have produced, in our view confidence in the Council would be undermined if you were not struck off."
"53. I turn then to the question of the sanction imposed, namely that of striking-off. Again I am obliged to give primacy to the judgment of the specialist panel on what measures are required to maintain the standards and reputation of the profession which is the central consideration at this stage. In my judgment I can only interfere with sanction if I am satisfied the panel has gone outside the ambit of its own indicative guidelines on sanction having regard to its findings on misconduct and fitness to practise, either by misdirecting itself as to that guidance or by misapplying it in the sense of reaching a wholly perverse conclusion - by for example again taking into account irrelevant matters or failing to have proper regard to that which was [sic].
54. Again, much as I may have personal sympathy with the position of the Appellant given her otherwise unblemished record, I have found it impossible to find any such basis for interfering with the decision to strike off in this case.
55. It is patently obvious from the stated reasons that the panel did closely follow the indicative guidelines and consider each potential sanction in increasing severity by reference to the guideline indicators and gave sensible reasons for rejecting each as inappropriate, before finally deciding upon the sanction of striking-off as the appropriate one, on the grounds that in its view 'the misconduct which we have found proved is fundamentally incompatible with being a registered midwife' and 'although we recognise the mitigation you have produced confidence in the Council would be undermined if you were not struck off'. Again, I can find no basis for saying that this conclusion was perverse in the sense indicated.
56. It is clear that the panel did take the Appellant's otherwise unblemished record both before and since the events in question into account at this stage but that what ultimately swayed with the panel was again the Appellant's lack of insight into her failings and her refusal to accept even now that they had occurred, and when these failings had had been found by the panel to represent a serious departure from the standards which the NMC and the public had a right to expect from a registered midwife. Again I can find nothing perverse in the weight given to this factor by the panel since I accept that it is this factor which means that the panel could not be confident that the Appellant would not repeat this type of behaviour in the future, and as the panel said, demonstrates a continuing risk to patients should a similar situation arise again. The fact that there had to date been no such re-occurrence cannot not be determinative in undermining the weight to be given to this critical factor of lack of insight."
"58. I should make clear that I have anxiously deliberated over whether I should interfere with the refusal of the panel in this case to contemplate as appropriate, a conditions of practice order, given the strength of the Applicant's clear record both before and since the events of 2004. The list of factors indicative of the appropriateness of such an order are given in the material guidance under paragraph 11 as including:
- identifiable areas of the registrant's practice are in need of retraining and there is no evidence of general incompetence (lack of competence cases)
- potential and willingness to respond positively to conditions requiring retraining (misconduct and lack of competence cases);
- conditions which will protect patients and clients during the period they are in force; and
- possible to formulate appropriate and practical conditions of practice.
59. When I was hearing the appeal, my initial reaction was to question why such appropriate conditions could not be formulated in this case along the lines of those strongly urged upon me by Mrs Stanzel on behalf of the Appellant designed to improve the Appellant's skills in and awareness of the correct procedures on episiotomy, third stage of labour; bleeding during delivery, through compulsory attendance on retraining courses, appropriate supervision and examination.
60. Ultimately however I have not felt able to say that this court is in any position to substitute its own judgment on the question of what is or is not possible, for that of the specialist tribunal and I have no material before me sufficient to hold that the finding of impossibility to prescribe enforceable conditions was a perverse one. It was very clear from the oral submissions made before me on each side that the key to any workable and enforceable conditions would be the element of appropriate supervision. The difficulty however as identified by the panel in its reasons lies in the Appellant's practising as an agency midwife with the consequential absence of an available supervising employer able to provide the necessary supervision and support. The possibility of the NMC allocating a supervisor was canvassed before me by the Appellant but without laying before me any evidence that this would be either possible or practicable. The response of Mrs McDonald on behalf of the respondent was to inform me that such allocation was outside the ambit and role of the NMC and that there remained the need -- absent in this case -- of a supervising employer if a conditions of practice order were to be a possible option.
61. Thus I have ultimately concluded that there is no material before me which would justify this court holding - as submitted by the Appellant - that the 'CCC erred in concluding on the impossibility of prescribing enforceable conditions'."
Lord Justice Mummery:
Lord Justice Rimer:
Order: Appeal dismissed.