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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust v A Local Authority & Ors [2022] EWHC 2596 (Fam) (13 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2022/2596.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2596 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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(1) A Local Authority (2) M (3) J (A Child, by her Guardian, John Brackenridge) |
Respondents |
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Mr Daniel Longe (instructed by the Local Authority) for the First Respondent
Ms Gemma Taylor KC and Ms Jennifer Kotilaine (instructed by Hecht Montgomery) for the Second Respondent
Ms Deborah Bryan (instructed by Beu Solicitors, for the hearing on 7th October) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 5th and 7th October 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE HAYDEN:
i. It is lawful and in J's best interests to be provided with non-invasive ventilation, for as long as it is required and tolerated;
ii. It is not in J's best interests to receive: invasive mechanical ventilation, deep suctioning, dialysis of any description, inotrope support, manual bagging and chest compressions, and CPR;
iii. In the event of J being weaned from non-invasive ventilation and her respiratory function deteriorating, it will not be in her best interests to be given further non-invasive ventilation;
iv. It is lawful and in J's best interests to receive palliative care including antibiotics (if clinically indicated), light suctioning, analgesia, and sedation.
"1. 30-week prematurity;
2. Generalised developmental delay;
3. Focal seizures;
4. Microcephaly;
5. Quadriplegic cerebral palsy;
6. PEG-J fed (previously NG fed for several years);
7. Left sided sensory-neural hearing loss;
8. Visual impairment, nystagmus, strabismus and hypermetropia;
9. Failure to thrive;
10. History of urinary tract infections (UTIs) in infancy;
11. Resultant USS demonstrating a small, atrophic, scarred right kidney with 5% split function on DMSA scan – normal USS appearances of left kidney with verbally reported normal renal biochemistry;
12. Hypothyroidism;
13. Adrenal insufficiency;
14. MRI scans showing generalised hypomyelination and asymmetric white matter signal abnormalities with cerebellar and thalamic dysplasia;
15. November 2021 PICU admission for Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) infection and hypernatraemic dehydration requiring two days of intubation and ventilation."
"1. Chronic kidney disease stage 5 (CKD-5) with oliguria;
2. Fluid overload;
3. Hypertension;
4. Fluid volume and nutritional restriction;
5. Recurrent sepsis -? occult (hidden/unseen) source;
6. Ongoing peri-hepatic collection (fluid collection around the liver);
7. Recent growths of CPC-enterocci and multi-drug resistant pseudomonas (two extremely resistant forms of bacteria) in the respiratory secretions and urine;
8. Deterioration in baseline neurological function, with increasing airway suction requirements for worsening/pooling secretions."
"There has been a definite deterioration in her upper airway secretion control which may reflect changes in her airway/pharyngeal tone and ability to cough effectively. This has resulted in her most recent admission to PICU and the ward staff reported having to provide almost continuous airway suction. They have noted a general lack of response when this is now performed compared to previously when she would resist and gag at the suction catheters. She has suffered profound and prolonged desaturation because of these obstructing secretions. Ward staff report that she is recently "borderline unresponsive" to routine observations and does not respond to the fingerprick blood sugar testing.
Such is the continuous need for airway and chest management, the general physiotherapy requirements have taken less precedence given time and resource constraints. Ward staff have reported distress at the amount of suctioning they must give throughout 24 hours, interfering with her rest and sleep. Staff members have questioned the utility of doing this and are concerned that J is no longer able to communicate her pain/distress at this continuous, invasive suctioning." (my emphasis)
"On the morning of 06/10/2022, I reviewed J on the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit ("PICU") as part of the Palliative Care ward round. I arrived on PICU with [AJ], Clinical Nurse Specialist, and when we arrived J's sister [R] and her maternal aunt [T] were with her. Whilst I was reviewing J, [M] arrived at the bedside and asked if she could speak to me separately outside. I took [M] to the small meeting room on PICU and we sat down. [M] said that she had reached a decision, and asked if I could I guess what it was? I asked her if it would be easier for her if I said out loud what I thought she was thinking, rather than her having to say it herself. She nodded. I said I thought she had made the bravest and most unselfish decision she will have to make in her life. [M] nodded and said, "she is tired [Dr K], she is tired" (referring to J). [M] said she could not put J through an intubation to be ventilated. If she did, it would be doing it for herself rather than for J's benefit.
[M] explained to me that she had come to the conclusion that it is not in J's best interests for her to be intubated or for her to be resuscitated if she has a cardiac arrest. [M] explained that she recognised that J's body was not able to maintain stability, and that J had that needed intense, invasive, distressing treatment yesterday morning to recover from her profound desaturation (whilst on PICU on 05/10/2022 J had desaturated, with her oxygen levels down to 31%). [M] said she also had noted that J's blood pressure was low today."
i. That J should not be intubated and ventilated (i.e., invasive ventilation);
ii. That she should not receive manual bagging (i.e., manual ventilation via a facemask and bag) or chest compressions in the event that J has a profound desaturation or cardiorespiratory arrest; and
iii. That she should not receive deep suctioning (as [M] recognised that this is distressing for J).
i. Applications of this nature made late in the day, on short notice, are inherently undesirable. The opportunity to reflect and absorb evidence in this case led to an outcome which is manifestly beneficial to J and in her best interests. Whilst some urgent applications will be inevitable, they can frequently be avoided by careful and sensitive planning;
ii. The sensitivity and skill of the doctors and nurses here reflects the reputation of this hospital and its vast experience of these desperately sad cases. Dr K took great care to make herself available to M and to give M space to absorb the extent and significance of her daughter's decline. She also helped M marshal and articulate her thoughts at a time when it was difficult for her to do so. The extracts from Dr K's conversations with M, set out above, are to my mind, a paradigm of good practice;
iii. The extant care proceedings meant that M already had her own experienced family lawyers in place, who have greatly assisted her. I have no doubt that has been invaluable and has been a significant factor in achieving this outcome for J and her family. Though such circumstances will rarely arise, it is illustrative of the very considerable benefit to be gained by timely access to independent and impartial lawyers, familiar with the issues and who can help parents navigate them in a way which respects their own parental autonomy. I recognise that the restriction on access to legal aid will not always make this possible;
iv. Allied to (iii) above is the fact that M has been positively enabled to examine, absorb, and reflect upon the evolving evidence and to consider the detail of the palliative options. She has not drifted into perceiving the competing alternatives as a 'battle', nor in any way led to misapprehend a change of position on her part as "giving up";
v. The gentle plans of the "memory making" team and the psychological support available clearly has great benefit. It strikes me that such resources might also be utilised in helping parents to evaluate the medical options and particularly so where they do not have access to their own independent lawyers.