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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> East Suffolk and North Essex NHS Foundation Trust v DL & Anor (Rev1) [2023] EWCOP 47 (27 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2023/47.html Cite as: [2023] EWCOP 47 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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East Suffolk and North Essex NHS Foundation Trust |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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(1) DL (by her litigation friend the Official Solicitor) (2) Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust |
Respondents |
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Ian Brownhill (instructed by the Official Solicitor) for the First Respondent
Katie Gollop KC (instructed by Kennedys Law LLP) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 24-26 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Ms Justice Henke:
My decision in Summary
a) Pursuant to S15 MCA 2005, I make a declaration that DL lacks the capacity to make decisions about her hydration and her nutrition.
b) I declare that providing nutrition and hydration to DL in accordance with the "escalation plan" is lawful and in DL's bests interests.
My Decision in Full
Introduction and relevant background
a) The MDT attempted to engage DL, but this was difficult, she indicated that she would not eat and "wanted to go to heaven."
b) DL appeared emaciated and dehydrated.
c) There was little time to make a decision as to refeeding and that would need to be done within 48 hours to reduce the risk of further deterioration and potential death.
d) If DL continued to decline to eat, it was proposed that she is refed via NGTube whilst sedated on an intensive care unit. A ward environment was not considered suitable because of DL's behaviours as seen on the day of assessment and as set out in DL's history.
This Hearing
a) Dr A, a Consultant in General Psychiatry who has had clinical responsibility for DL on the ward since 6 March 2023. I have read a witness statement from Dr A, her annotations to the initial treatment plan proposed by the acute trust and I have heard her evidence. She gave her evidence to me on Tuesday of this week. She had seen DL the day before. She described to the court how DL is confined to her mattress on the floor of the seclusion unit in the ward. DL is now so weak she cannot roll over. She is no longer crawling around. She told me that from a psychiatric/psychological point of view refeeding under sedation was the best option for DL. Although there were risks involved with giving a General Anaesthetic, on balance those risks should be taken. It would be the least traumatic option for DL and would be in line with her wishes and feelings. The other option namely feeding on a side ward via NG tube and under restraint would be traumatic for DL and was frankly unrealistic. It is highly likely that DL would have to be restrained throughout her admission. That of itself would be traumatising. If mittens were used, DL would not be able to use Makaton to communicate and would become isolated. If not restrained she is highly likely, almost to a point of certainty given her past behaviours, to pull tubes and cannulas out. However restrained DL is still likely to take any opportunity that presents to take her tubes and cannulas out and to do so repeatedly. That will compound the trauma she experiences. Dr A did not favour chemical restraint because DL is so weak and because she queries the efficacy of doses that would be safe for DL in her current condition. In Dr A's opinion the least worst option would be to refeed her under sedation. Whilst that carries risks which she factored into her thinking when she gave her evidence, it was the best option that could be devised for DL because it was the least traumatic. According to Dr A, trauma is the driver for most if not all of DL's conditions and presentation. DL has previously found an inpatient stay at an acute hospital traumatic. There is a real risk that any use of physical restraint to enable treatment will trigger past trauma. The environment on a ward, even in a side room, is noisy and busy. It brings with it a real risk to DL's mental and physical health and further deterioration in her presentation.
b) Dr L, a consultant gastroenterologist in Hospital I. He has experience of managing a multitude of patients requiring additional nutrition support with the aid of a nutrition team. He had provided to the court a statement dated 24 October 2023. Prior to making his statement he visited DL on the ward. He did not weigh her but assessed her weight to be between 40-45 kg. He agreed with Dr S' statements regarding the health risks to DL of reduced oral intake and the medical need for intervention. He considered it to be in her best interests if DL were treated urgently and that the treatment could be completed within 7 days to mitigate the risks of refeeding syndrome. Dr L outlined to DL the need to insert a NG tube and the need to use medication/restraint to help her mage with its insertion as well as taking bloods, which she appeared accepting of his proposals. Following his review, he spoke to Dr A and accepted her concerns about the psychological harm that would be caused by restraint but concluded that as DL was so weak, the restraint would be as minimal as possible. He also acknowledged the risk of physical harm that DL may pose to herself and others on the ward. He factored in the risks of anaesthetic including assisted ventilation. On balance and given DL's current acceptance of the need for hospitalisation and feeding, he felt she could be managed on the ward. He proposed treating DL in a large side room on the adult Gastrointestinal ward. DL's privacy could be enhanced by blocking the windows and doors with privacy blinds and using the cubicle curtains. The room could not be completely blocked off, but her privacy could be protected. When he had spoken to her, she had wanted multiple toys with her as well as posters in her current room. DL wished to have someone present who can enable her to communicate using Makaton. His trained staff would insert the NG tube and position it but it appeared to me from the totality of his evidence that he was reliant on ward staff providing restraint to enable his clinical staff to place the tube. The only staff he had access to that could apply restraint were security staff. Whilst Dr L's preferred option was to feed DL via NG tube using a bolus feed over 20-30 minutes at regular intervals 4 times a day. Physical and chemical restraint was likely to be needed to insert the tube, but mittens could be used during the feed to prevent the tube being pulled out. If that plan did not work, then there would be an escalation in accordance with the treatment plan to ITU. In cross-examination Dr L accepted that placing DL under an anaesthetic would have no real impact on her feeding, his concern was about the risks associated with general anaesthesia. In relation to feeding via a PIC line he considered that a riskier option because of the risk of infection and potentially sepsis. In his opinion enteral feeding was better at delivering nutrition than parenteral feeding. The safer option would be, in his opinion, the least restrictive option namely feeding via NG tube under physical restraint. However, he accepted that Dr S had come to a different view. Although he did not share her view, he accepted that her opinion fell within the band of reasonable opinions a gastroenterologist could have in the context of this case.
c) Dr N. He is a consultant in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthetics in the acute trust. He has provided two statements which are before me. He gave oral evidence on Wednesday 26 October. He acknowledges the potential risks to mental health as stated by Dr A but was clear that although it is out with his expertise, he knows of no mental health condition that can be reversed with force feeding in ITU in 7 days. From his perspective DL's vital parameters and bloods remain within the normal limits. There is no need for organ support or any identified reversible pathology which will benefit from DL entering ITU. General anaesthesia or sedation may lead to delirium and confusion when the patient is brought around. Some of these effects may be transient but there is a risk of PTSD and post ITU psychosis syndrome. Admitting her to ITU for sedation without at least trying first other ward-based options potentially risk DL's life and increase her morbidity. She has lost a significant amount of weight and is very dehydrated; this poses a significant risk of circulatory collapse during anaesthetic induction. Should that occur then she would be on a ventilator throughout her stay on ITU and predisposed to a risk of lung injury. This is in turn will potentially set in train a further deterioration in her physical state, she may be weak, difficult to wean off a ventilator and may need a tracheostomy. Dr N was very clear in his statements that he preferred a step ladder approach which would exhaust all other options before admission onto the ITU.
The Issues as Raised before Me
a) Restraining DL (physically and/or chemically) to insert and then maintain a NG tube in place to enable regular bolus feeding; or
b) Feeding DL via a NG tube under general anaesthetic with an endotracheal tube being used, to prevent asphyxiation.
The Parties' Final and Settled Positions in Closing
a) Does DL have capacity to make decisions about hydration and nutrition? He submits that she does not and that I should make a declaration under S15 MAC 2005 in that regard.
b) If DL does not have the capacity, what are the available options for DL's hydration and nutrition? However, the manner in which he proceeded to develop his submission refined that question - it became what are the realistic options placed before the court? The submission on behalf of DL was that all the evidence pointed to the fact that the plan for treatment on the ward using a NG tube would not work and was not a realistic option.
c) Which of the available options was in DL's best interests? Applying section 4 of the Mental Capacity Act 2005 and all the factors set out therein, he concluded that the balance very firmly fell in favour of the plan to admit DL to the ITU for deep sedation and that once under sedation to refeed her via a PICC line. To act contrary to DL's wishes and feelings and to impose restraint would be to risk traumatising DL again. The unchallenged evidence of Dr A is that trauma was at the root of DL's disorders and retraumatising her would be likely to cause psychiatric and psychological harm.
d) What restrain, if any, will be necessary to deliver the refeeding? In closing he drew my attention to the lack of any restraint plan in this case. In those circumstances he submits that I cannot and should not make a S16 MCA order with a S4A order attached to it.
e) How will DL be transported to the acute Trust? On behalf of DL, the Official solicitor made no comment other than it would be by ambulance.
The Legal Framework
"12. Whilst careful consideration must, obviously, be afforded to the opinions and analysis of experienced medical professionals, these opinions always require to be considered in the context of all the other evidence. The roles of the court and the clinician or expert are entirely distinct. It is ultimately the court that is usually best placed to weigh expert evidence against and alongside other available evidence (see A County Council & K, D & L [2005] EWHC 144 (Fam); [2005] 1 FLR 851 per Charles J). It will be rare for the evidence of one doctor or indeed one area of specialism to be determinative of the outcome of a case. At the end of the day, it is the Judge not the doctor who determines the case and, always on the totality of the available evidence.
13. Evaluating best interests of a protected party (P), where there is dispute, can truly only fall to the responsibility of the Judge because it will always require a survey of the broad canvas of material that frequently can only be properly assessed when it has been ventilated in a courtroom and put to the assay in cross-examination.
14. As Lady Hale observed in Aintree University NHS Trust v James [2013] UKSC 67 at [39] , the approach to the framework in Section 4 Mental Capacity Act 2005 , should be as follows:
"…in considering best interest of this particular patient at this particular time, decision makers must look at welfare in the wider sense, not just medical but social and psychological. They must consider the nature of the medical treatment in question, what it involves and its prospects of success. They must consider the outcome of the treatment will be. They must try and put themselves in the place of the individual patient and ask what his attitude towards the particular treatment is or is likely to be and must consult others interested in his welfare of what the attitude might be.""
Discussion and Decision
Capacity
Realistic Options.
Best Interests
"Permeating the determination of the issue that arises in this case must be a full recognition of the value of human life, and of the respect in which it must be held. No life is to be relinquished easily."
Transport Plan
Restraint
Conclusion