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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 >> Griffiths v The Secretary of State for Health [2015] EWHC 1264 (QB) (06 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/1264.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1264 (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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RICHARD GRIFFITHS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH |
Defendant |
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John Whitting QC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15th to 21st April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner:
INTRODUCTION
THE ACCIDENT
THE MISTAKE
THE DOCUMENTS
"There are seventeen trial bundles and a core bundle and application bundle. Files four to seventeen contain largely irrelevant documents…"
"Eighth Law: At least 80 per cent of the documents shall be irrelevant. Counsel shall refer in Court to no more than ten per cent of the documents..."
ETIOLOGY
"Any spinal cord injury will have an area of cord tissue at critical levels of ischaemia which surrounds an area of necrosis. Any factor increasing this ischaemia has the potential to cause a deterioration of neurological function and, on occasion, this can be permanent."
This is why, as the experts agree, any patient with a broken neck should be kept flat and his cervical spine immobilised. As the BOA publication goes on to state on page 16
"Mobilisation requires a graduated and carefully monitored approach. Simply allowing a patient with an acute cord injury to sit without such a programme is unacceptable." [Emphasis not added].
THE SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE
i) the population of 52 patients was, statistically speaking, extremely small, particularly in the absence of other studies relating to the same issue (a point which was also made by Professor Fairbank);ii) The study was entirely insensitive to the actual mechanics of the manhandling in each case. It was unsafe to apply the concept of "manhandling" mechanistically as if it were simply a box to be ticked without each incident of manhandling being treated as having a greater or lesser claim to causative potency. For example, in no fewer than 34 instances the patient in question suffered not only mismanagement through lack of care but also direct and inappropriate therapeutic intervention;
iii) The periods over which proper treatment of the patients in this study had been delayed varied considerably. It is to be noted that it covered a wide array of cases in which the delay in recognition of spinal cord injury ranged from between ten hours to six weeks;
iv) The study was also insensitive to the nature and severity of the original injury. For example, in seven of the patients, the neurological deficit at the time of initial presentation was, in stark contrast to Mr Griffiths' condition, minimal.
CAUSATION
i) Was there a level of negligent manhandling liable to cause further injury to the spinal cord?ii) Did Mr Griffiths' condition deteriorate between the time he was found by the ambulance crew at the bottom of the stairs to the time he arrived at hospital?
I propose to deal with each issue in turn.
MANHANDLING
i) Mr Griffiths was lifted from his prone position and was sat up in the hall;ii) He was lifted from this position, moved and deposited on the sofa in the lounge;
iii) He was lifted off the sofa and taken down the front steps and across the garden to the ambulance in a canvas chair;
iv) He travelled in the ambulance to hospital.
His neck was allowed to move freely throughout these manoeuvres.
DETERIORATION
"…the issue of causation devolves to this simple question: did the risk, inherent in the failure properly to immobilise the neck, of further neurological deterioration in an existing spinal cord injury, actually eventuate in this case?
There is, or appears to be, consensus that that question is, in turn, answered by the determination of whether or not there was any deterioration in neurological function between the time of the Claimant's fall down the stairs and his arrival in the Emergency Department."
MOVEMENT
TRUNCAL SUPPORT
FLACCIDITY
BLOOD PRESSURE
CONCLUSION ON CAUSATION
i) The mere fact of manhandling on the scale revealed in this case would not have been sufficient, without more, to justify a conclusion on the balance of probabilities that the negligence had caused injury;ii) Deterioration of spinal injury is relatively uncommon and the most common cause is manhandling;
iii) There was evidence of both manhandling and deterioration in this case sufficiently compelling to support the conclusion that the manhandling was responsible for the deterioration.
OTHER POINTS
CONCLUSION
Note 1 Which, for the avoidance of doubt, is a work of parody. [Back]