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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> English -v- South Eastern Health Board & Anor [2011] IEHC 362 (28 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H362.html Cite as: [2011] IEHC 362 |
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Judgment Title: English -v- South Eastern Health Board & Anor Composition of Court: Judgment by: Ryan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 362 THE HIGH COURT 1999 9989 P BETWEEN ANNE ENGLISH PLAINTIFF AND
SOUTH EASTERN HEALTH BOARD AND RAYMOND HOWARD DEFENDANTS JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Ryan, delivered the 28th July, 2011 Introduction 2. In the early hours of Wednesday 9th October the plaintiff began experiencing severe pain in her lower abdomen. She was distressed and shivering with an increased pulse and respiratory rate and significantly reduced blood pressure. The doctor on duty discussed her condition by telephone with the second defendant, Dr. Howard, who was the consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist in charge of the plaintiff. He directed that the plaintiff be transferred to the labour ward. Later that morning the plaintiff’s condition had largely stabilised, her pulse rate and blood pressure returning to normal, although the acute abdomen remained and the plaintiff was recorded as being distressed and very pale. In an untimed note the plaintiff was recorded as suffering from pleuritic chest pain. Dr. Howard did not see the plaintiff when he did his rounds between 9am and 9.30am and did not see her until around midday. He then directed that the plaintiff be transferred to Our Lady’s Hospital in Cashel (some 20 miles away) for a surgical opinion and noted the possibility that she might be suffering from acute retrocecal appendicitis. 3. The plaintiff was transferred to Cashel by ambulance on Wednesday afternoon. She was recorded as suffering severe and continuous pain, including shoulder pain, amongst other symptoms, and she was administered an analgesic. She was reviewed at 6.10pm, after which her condition was discussed with Dr. Fitzgerald, an SHO in Clonmel. The doctors in Cashel decided that Mrs English did not have retrocecal appendicitis or any surgical problem and that she was to be transferred back to St. Joseph’s. She was kept in Cashel overnight for observation. 4. On Thursday 10th October at 11.50am the plaintiff was complaining of pain in the left side of her abdomen and she was catheterised. The doctor decided that she should be transferred back to Clonmel straight away. The note recorded “?? bleeding intraabdominally”. It is likely that the plaintiff was bleeding as a result of her ruptured fallopian tube, which was the site of her ectopic pregnancy. In this critical condition, she was transferred back to St. Joseph’s in an ambulance, accompanied by a doctor, arriving at approximately 1.40pm. 5. On arrival the plaintiff was seen by Dr. Howard and immediately transferred to the operating theatre, where anaesthetic measures had to be taken to resuscitate her. Dr. Howard performed a laparotomy and it transpired that the plaintiff had an ectopic pregnancy. She had suffered very substantial blood loss through the ruptured fallopian tube, which had to be excised. Some three litres of blood were removed from the plaintiff’s peritoneal cavity. 6. The plaintiff made a satisfactory physical recovery from the operation. She was discharged from hospital on the 18th October. However, she claims that she was severely psychologically damaged by the incident and continues to suffer to the present day. 7. The proceedings were instituted in October 1999. The Alleged Negligence. 9. The following questions arise for consideration.
i. failing to diagnose or even to consider seriously ectopic pregnancy between the 7th October and the 10th October 1996? ii. transferring the plaintiff to Our Lady’s Hospital Cashel for a surgical opinion when she was in a seriously ill condition? b. If so, did such negligence cause injury to the plaintiff? c. Was Our Lady’s Hospital Cashel negligent in sending plaintiff back to St. Joseph’s Hospital, Clonmel on the 10th October 1996 when she was in a seriously ill condition? d. If either or both defendants were negligent, how much of the plaintiff’s psychiatric problems is attributable thereto? e. Apportionment of liability between the defendants. 10. One of these issues, Question c above, can be disposed of at the outset, having regard to the consensus of expert opinion in the case. The relevant witnesses were almost unanimous in their condemnation of the decision made at Cashel Hospital on Thursday 10th October to send the plaintiff back to Clonmel when she was critically ill. They dismissed the attendance of a doctor on the journey as being useless. Mr Roger Clements and Mr Malcolm Griffiths, experts called by the plaintiff, were unequivocal. The former said it was irresponsible. Mr Griffiths described the decision to transfer the plaintiff back to Clonmel, given her rapidly deteriorating condition at that time, as “reckless” because she had a very high risk of dying en route or arriving at the other hospital in a position where she could not be resuscitated. In his report, he described as “culpable to the point of gross recklessness” the transfer of the plaintiff from a unit with acute surgical facilities when she was requiring resuscitative measures to maintain her circulation. The consultant called by the hospital, Dr. Darling, said that if there was an operating theatre available in Cashel, considering the deterioration of the plaintiff’s condition, to transfer her back was “perhaps a strange decision.” If the facilities were available in Cashel at that time then the plaintiff should have been operated on there and then, he said. Mr Richard Keane SC for Cashel Hospital did not ascribe the transfer to any lack of operating facilities. Dr Peter Boylan, who was Dr Howard’s expert witness, said that following the patient’s serious deterioration in Cashel on Thursday morning 10th October, it was a “reckless” decision by the authorities at Cashel to transfer her back again to Clonmel when she was clearly suffering from internal bleeding, evident from the fact that she had been suffering shoulder tip pain and had experienced a collapse. It is therefore an irresistible conclusion that Cashel Hospital was negligent. Dr Howard’s Liability 12. Having seen Mrs English on his round on Tuesday 8th, Dr Howard’s next contribution to her care was when he discussed her condition on the phone with Dr Fathil at 2.50am the next day. The plaintiff was causing serious concern to the nurses who called the doctor on duty. He shared their anxiety and called the consultant at home. Dr Howard said that Mrs English should be moved to the labour ward where she could be closely monitored through the night. He saw her again at some time between mid-day and 1pm on Wednesday 9th October when he sent her to Cashel. This is the decision that is critical to Dr Howard’s liability. At this point the patient still had significant symptoms but Dr Howard did not know what was wrong with her. If Mrs English had a molar pregnancy, which was the only suggested diagnosis that had been made up to then, the appropriate treatment was evacuation of the uterus. Had that procedure been undertaken, it would have been revealed that it was not a case of molar pregnancy so the conclusion would have been obvious that it was an ectopic pregnancy and a laparotomy would then have been done. Dr Howard was afraid that if he proceeded to do a laparotomy operation, he might discover that the plaintiff’s problem was not gynaecological but surgical and that he would not be able to deal with it. He did not have a specific surgical condition in mind: it was general not specific anxiety. He thought of retrocecal appendicitis as an example of the kind of condition that he would not be able to handle, not because Mrs English’s symptoms pointed to that ailment. Mr. Roger Clements Mr. Malcolm Griffiths 15. In relation to the plaintiff’s deterioration in the early hours of 9th October, Mr. Griffiths said that “2.50am in the morning is when the alarm bells really ought to have rung” and that there was “no safe explanation for her presentation on the early morning of the 9th.” He said that the plaintiff should have been operated on promptly that morning and the failure to do so was sub-standard care. He agreed with Mr. Clements that the pleuritic pain which the plaintiff was experiencing was consistent with intraperitoneal bleeding. Mr. Griffiths thought that the diagnosis of possible retrocecal appendicitis was bizarre. He added that the indicators of retrocecal appendicitis such as fever and high white blood cell count were not present. Dr. Michael Darling Dr. Brendan Powell Dr. Raymond Howard, the second defendant Dr. Peter Boylan 20. My conclusion in regard to Dr Howard is that he did not make a diagnosis before transferring Mrs English. Instead, he merely went along with the previously suggested diagnosis, which was of an extremely rare condition, without recording or addressing the possibility of one that was ten times more probable. Dr Howard said that ectopic pregnancy was always among the possibles as to diagnosis but there is no mention of it in the notes even as a possibility. I accept the evidence that his failure to exclude this diagnosis was negligent. In regard to the failure to treat the plaintiff for the condition he thought she had, he made the case that she could have had a very recent pregnancy which was too early to show up in the uterus and, if so, doing an evacuation would amount to abortion of a viable pregnancy. The problem with this defence is that it is no more than a theory that could account for a policy of non-intervention but there is no evidence that it did actually feature in the doctor’s thinking at the time. This is an example of the retrospection that Mr Hanratty SC, for Dr Howard, deprecated in the evidence of the expert witnesses called by the plaintiff. Dr Howard did not know what was wrong with plaintiff, whether it was related to her obstetric condition or was something entirely different. He made no assessment of what her condition was or what were the possible diagnoses, based on the available information. He did not actually think the plaintiff had an acute appendix –she did not have the symptoms. He put down retrocecal appendix merely as a speculation of something that represented a surgical possibility but not on the basis of any evidence. In my opinion, Dr Howard’s decision to send Mrs English to Cashel had more to do with his own anxieties than with medical analysis. The most temperate critic of Dr Howard was Dr Darling, whose opinion as to that defendant’s failures of care were endorsed by the plaintiff’s experts and were not refuted by Dr Howard or Dr Boylan. I accept the evidence of those experts and it follows that Dr Howard was negligent in each of the respects set out above. Damages The Plaintiff 22. There are reasons to doubt the reliability of the plaintiff’s recollection. Her evidence is in conflict in important respects with that of her general practitioner, Dr Durack, and his records. She claimed to have discussed the ectopic pregnancy with him much more often than he recalled. Of major importance in my view is a contradiction between her evidence as to the cessation of sexual relations with her husband and the general practitioner’s records and evidence of treatment to promote conception. A minor but not trivial point is the documentary evidence that she consulted Dr Howard for a gynaecological complaint subsequent to the events of October 1996. 23. These are not the only complications in the assessment of damages. The plaintiff suffered a grief reaction to the loss of her pregnancy but that was not the fault of the defendants. She is entitled to such damages are appropriate to compensate for the physical and psychological injury she sustained during and because of the journey to Cashel, the time she was there and the return to Clonmel. The plaintiff gave evidence that she was aware prior to the outward trip of uncertainty and doubt on the part of the doctors in Clonmel but I found that unconvincing and quite improbable as something that might have been observed by the plaintiff at the time. 24. Referring to her condition at Clonmel hospital in the early hours of 9th October when she went into shock, the plaintiff described her abdominal pains as excruciating, saying she was terrified and believed she was in danger of death. By the time of her ambulance transfer to Cashel that afternoon, she said the pain was worsening and she was convinced she was going to die; she was weak and hazy. She said the journey was particularly difficult because she felt every bump along the way and this caused her a great deal of pain. Although it was a short journey, it seemed like “a lifetime”. At 11.50am the following day, when she was recorded as complaining of abdominal pains once more, the plaintiff said that the pain was such that she was praying to die. When she was transferred back to Clonmel by ambulance, she found that journey particularly distressing and remembered blacking out from the pain and being resuscitated with oxygen. She described being extremely panicked at this stage, saying she did not know what was going to happen to her. 25. The plaintiff was very sore and nauseous after the operation by Dr. Howard to remove her ectopic pregnancy and it took a while for her to get her strength back. She explained how she had been elated at discovering she was pregnant originally and how her psychological state following the incident was one of shock, hating the fact that she had lost the baby and she described having feelings of guilt. 26. The plaintiff said that prior to the events of October 1996 she was bubbly, sociable and outgoing and enjoyed a happy relationship with her husband. Since the incident she has experienced flashbacks and nightmares on a daily basis, her sleep has been seriously disturbed, she has lacked motivation, she has become irritable and her enjoyment of life has disappeared. She said that she experienced loss of libido and engaged in comfort eating. She was terrified of further pregnancies and this seriously affected her marriage: there had been no sexual relations since the ectopic pregnancy. She said the marriage is now a relationship that consists of little more than co-existence, though she described her husband as generally having been “very supportive”. 27. She said that since the incident she does not socialise, does not go anywhere if she can avoid it, she is afraid of crowds and experiences self-loathing. She has been very low and feels hopeless, although things have improved recently, particularly thanks to the help of her husband, her General Practitioner Dr. Durack and her psychiatrist Dr. O’Leary, though there are still bad days and she continues to suffer from nightmares. According to her evidence, the plaintiff starting seeing Dr. Durack quite frequently after the incident to discuss her psychological problems and he referred her to Dr. O’Leary in November 2002. The plaintiff was prescribed anti-depressants, which she refused to take at first but eventually began doing so and continues to take them to this day. She has also been taking sleeping pills since 2003. However, the plaintiff did not accept treatment offered by Dr O’Leary, she would not attend counselling, did not take medication & did not attend psychiatry appointments. 28. In or about 2005 the plaintiff’s children were placed in foster care for a period of some five weeks following an intervention of the social services after the children’s school raised concerns about their welfare. 29. In cross-examination, the plaintiff acknowledged that she had been sexually abused by her father from the age of three until her teenage years. She described the abuse by her father as physical, emotional and verbal and said that he remained abusive even after the sexual abuse had ceased. With reference to comments she had made to Dr. O’Leary, it was put to the plaintiff that it was the thought of losing her baby from the ectopic pregnancy rather than her treatment by the medical authorities that was the source of her problems. She said that she saw the two things as part of the same bundle and that she was still affected by the experiences in the hospital and the physical pain she experienced. The plaintiff also explained that up until recently she was under the belief that she had lost two babies and that she had suffered an ectopic and a molar pregnancy, despite the fact that her condition had been explained to her beforehand. 30. The plaintiff’s evidence gave rise to concern as to credibility and reliability. She did not tell Dr O’Leary about her history and misinformed her about sexual relations after the ectopic pregnancy. She was slow to seek any advice or help and only did so around the time she instituted proceedings. Mrs English did not consult Dr Durack about the ectopic pregnancy for over two years yet she said he was a great help to her and she discussed her condition with him regularly in the period following the event. This is in complete conflict with his evidence. 31. No explanation was offered for the misinformation, for the non-compliance with therapy or for the non-attendance. The plaintiff sat in Court while information was obtained from Dr Durack about her efforts to become pregnant again after October, 1996 but no application was made to recall her to deal with this clear contradiction of what she had testified a short time before in an important element of the case. And Dr Durack sat in Court while an entry in his notes was interpreted. It read “post natal” and the inference was that the plaintiff suffered post-natal depression following the birth of one of her children. The doctor could have cleared the matter up one way or the other but there was no application to recall him. Uncertainty was apparently preferred to clarity. Dr. Bernard Durack 33. His first record of a reference to the ectopic pregnancy was in February 1999 when the plaintiff complained to him that she could not sleep, that she had psychological problems relating to the ectopic pregnancy and that there was no intimate relationship between her and her husband at that time. According to Dr. Durack’s notes, he prescribed her sleeping tablets and suggested she attend the psychiatric services. In October 1999 it would seem the plaintiff requested counselling but as things transpired she did not attend for psychiatric help until 2002. 34. Dr. Durack met regularly with the plaintiff over the following years, mostly on matters not connected with the ectopic pregnancy. In January 2011 Dr. Durack met with the plaintiff for an in depth interview for a medico-legal report requested by the plaintiff’s solicitors. His conclusion in that report was as follows:-
Dr. Zubaidah O’Leary 36. Dr. O’Leary’s next report, dated 15th February 2010, drew on various meetings with the plaintiff since 2003. The plaintiff was discharged from the psychiatric care service for failing to attend on a number of occasions but was re-referred in 2006 following the intervention of social services. Dr. O’Leary’s conclusion in that report was that the plaintiff continued “to have symptoms of post traumatic stress disorder with nightmares and flashbacks of the ectopic pregnancy events”, that her mood had been “clinically mildly depressed”, and that there were also issues of childhood sexual abuse. The report recommended the plaintiff attend a psychologist to help her deal with issues of post traumatic stress disorder and childhood sexual abuse (which was only disclosed by the plaintiff to Dr. O’Leary in 2008 following the death of the plaintiff’s mother) but noted that the plaintiff had declined this treatment. In her most recent report of 21st March 2011, Dr. O’Leary made the following diagnosis:
Ms. Jo Campion 38. In cross-examination, it was evident that the witness did not have a complete or accurate picture of the plaintiff’s history. In fairness, it would be demanding the impossible from an expert witness to expect her to isolate the trauma associated with a particular 24 hour period in circumstances that were themselves devastating and that happened more than 14 years previously. Dr. Richard Horgan 40. Similarly, he was of the view that the plaintiff’s social anxiety disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder predated the ectopic pregnancy. Dr. Horgan thought that long-term sexual abuse would have had a significant effect on the plaintiff. He said that temporal lobe epilepsy can lead to personality change. Dr. Horgan thought that the medical events surrounding the plaintiff’s ectopic pregnancy and in particular her hospital transfers made little more than a marginal contribution to her difficulties. His assessment was that her distress in relation to the events of October 1996 was due to the fact that she had an ectopic pregnancy, rather than the treatment she received, and to her fear of having another ectopic pregnancy. Conclusions - damages 42. The plaintiff had serious psychological problems prior to her ectopic pregnancy. Only a part of her psychological difficulties can be attributed to the medical events surrounding her ectopic pregnancy. And a smaller element of that is attributable to the added trauma caused by the defendants’ negligence. I find the analysis of Dr Horgan to be more persuasive that those of the plaintiff’s experts. Her distress in relation to the events of October 1996 was due to the fact that she had had an ectopic pregnancy and lost her baby rather than to the treatment she received. However, I think the impact of the negligent care was more than marginal but it was transient whereas the failed pregnancy continued to affect Mrs English. 43. The plaintiff is a vulnerable and psychologically scarred individual. She is confused and until recently seems not to have understood fully what occurred in October 1996. She also strikes me as someone who is somewhat disturbed and she has experienced hallucination type experiences involving her dead relatives. She is obviously in need of treatment and has received some but it has been intermittent and ineffective to date and the plaintiff has not been compliant. Ms Campion was somewhat critical of the treatment the plaintiff had received. 44. Finally, although the procedure which the plaintiff ultimately underwent to remove the ectopic pregnancy would have been necessary regardless of any negligence on the part of the defendants, the severity of it would have been less pronounced. She would in all likelihood have avoided a vertical abdominal incision and instead have had a transverse suprapubic incision, and she would not have necessitated large-scale blood transfusion. 45. In his submissions it was suggested by Mr. Hanratty S.C. for the second defendant that it was the transfer back from Cashel that caused the damage to the plaintiff. Even if Dr. Howard was negligent, it was submitted, the causative connection between that negligence and the damage sustained was broken by the intervening negligence of the doctors in Cashel. I do not accept this argument. The plaintiff described in graphic detail the pain and trauma she experienced over the course of the 9th October and in particular the ambulance journey from Clonmel to Cashel, which took place on the direction of Dr. Howard. She was in pain when she arrived and spent a difficult night at the hospital while she was under observation. It seems to me that it was only when she had deteriorated the following morning and the decision was taken by the doctors at Cashel to send her back to Clonmel that a new act of negligence took place. Up to that point the trauma experienced by the plaintiff flowed from the failure by Dr. Howard to diagnose her condition and his decision to transfer her to Clonmel. Dr. Howard therefore contributed significantly to the damage suffered by the plaintiff in terms of her pain, suffering, distress and her consequential psychological sequelae. 46. On behalf of the first defendant it was argued by Mr. Keane S.C. that whatever damage occurred to the plaintiff was simply a recurrence of the same problem that had occurred at 2.50am on the 9th October at Clonmel. It was asserted that Cashel hospital bore no causal responsibility for it. Again, I must dismiss this submission. The negligence on the part of the authorities at Cashel exacerbated the trauma that the plaintiff had already experienced and it is clear from the evidence that the transfer back to Clonmel by ambulance was the nadir of the plaintiff’s traumatic experience. It follows that the first and second defendants are concurrent wrongdoers. 47. In view of the very long time since these events took place and having regard to my view that the consequences of the defendants’ negligence were transient, I make a global award of damages in the sum of €75,000. Conclusions - contribution 49. To all intents and purposes the plaintiff was Dr. Howard’s patient. Dr. Howard first saw the plaintiff on 8th October, at which time there was sufficient information for a diagnosis of likely ectopic pregnancy. When the plaintiff deteriorated the following morning and showed symptoms of bleeding, Dr. Howard was slow to respond and when he did finally see the plaintiff his continued failure to spot the ectopic pregnancy and his decision to transfer her to Cashel was a serious mistake. That said, the plaintiff’s condition was stable at that point and there was no immediate risk to her life as far as Dr. Howard was aware. The following morning at Cashel, however, it would seem that the plaintiff’s ectopic pregnancy finally ruptured and it is no exaggeration to say she was close to death. The decision to transfer her from Cashel in this state amounted to gross negligence. 50. Considering the respective degrees of fault, I apportion the contributions as to 60% on the first defendant and 40% on the second defendant.
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