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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 >> O'Brien v Camden & Islington Health Authority [2001] EWCA Civ 325 (22 February 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/325.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 325 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL
APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION
TO RELY
ON FURTHER EVIDENCE
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 22nd February 2001 | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
JULIA O'BRIEN | ||
- v - | ||
CAMDEN & ISLINGTON HEALTH AUTHORITY |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London EC4A
2HD
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent was not
represented and did not attend
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"I would be grateful if you would see this woman who calls herself a solicitor and who fell in late November 1991 sustaining a left Colles fracture. It was manipulated under a haematoma block but the position was not satisfactory and we advised re-manipulation and an external fixator. She refused (with a good deal of histrionics) and the position was never really improved."
"The hand now looks almost neuropathic and the wrist is fixed in flexion. There is also some wasting of the small muscles. Her x-rays show a little patchy osteoporosis and I suspect that this is a Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy, although not entirely typical.
.....
The main problem at the moment is her rehabilitation ..... "
"It is admitted and averred that -
(i) the plaintiff attended the fracture clinic at the hospital the following morning, as instructed;
(ii) the plaintiff fainted in the reception area and was admitted to the hospital;
(iii) the plaintiff refused further intervention to her fracture, for example, by means of external fixation."
"That the defendant do by the 3rd December 1999 by notice in writing elect whom of Mr Kemp and Mr Winspur it proposes to call."
"1 A strange fixed habitus of her left hand and wrist, with inability to properly position or use the hand.
2 Flexion deformity of the wrist.
3 A constant aching in the hand."
"and they confirm a slightly comminuted but otherwise typical Colles fracture with an associated small fracture of the ulnar styloid ..... The original alignment of the fracture was unsatisfactory and closed manipulation was quite clearly indicated. The first and second reductions did not produce complete reduction although the position was not too unsatisfactory. The third manipulation produced excellent reduction with excellent positioning of the fragments. The volar fracture is well reduced. The subsequent follow-up x-rays taken confirm that the fractures have stayed in reasonable alignment, and that bony healing was taking place. X-rays taken at Mr Rupert Eckersley's 5 years later show the fracture to have collapsed and shortened slightly, and to have angled dorsally. The overall position, however, is fair and does not explain her current symptoms. Mr Eckersley himself stated `the alignment appears reasonable.'"
"has been left with significant residual functional difficulties in her left hand, particularly digital stiffness and also a fixed flexion deformity of her wrist. The digital stiffness is attributable to the RSD, the fixed flexion deformity is not attributable to the slight malpositioning of the healed Colles fracture."
"soft tissue shortening of the flexor muscles and tendons, and not the bony malpositioning of the distal radius or ulna. This would be confirmed by the fact that the radius feels in good alignment to palpation and that there is painless passive movement present without crepitus in both the distal radio-ulnar and the radio-carpal joints."
"Often Colles fractures require several attempts at manipulation primarily to obtain adequate reduction. The fractures also can displace, and require re-manipulation during the early healing period. It is therefore not unusual for two to three attempts at manipulation to be required in the casualty department or in subsequent follow-up in the orthopaedic clinic.
A `satisfactory reduction' has been achieved in Casualty."
" ..... the only absolute measure of reduction is an anatomical reduction which is seldom achieved in Colles fractures. `Satisfactory' is a relative evaluation and it takes a specialist with extensive clinical experience to pronounce a fracture acceptable or unacceptable. Additionally, the fracture many times can move in the first week or so between manipulations."
"MISS PERRY: ..... in very short term the three areas your Lordship will be dealing with are liability - was the fracture manipulated reasonably and satisfactorily, and my Lord it is the usual Bolam test.
JUDGE MACKAY: And they say yes.
MISS PERRY: They say yes, we say no.
JUDGE MACKAY: Right."
" ..... the defendant's case is squarely on the objective question as to whether or not the position of the fracture was acceptable on 29th November and thereafter."
"The defendant says that further treatment was considered and it was decided that further treatment should not be instituted and that decision was perfectly reasonable."
"My Lord, in relation to the pleadings, rightly or wrongly I think both parties have regarded the pleadings as having been rather superseded by events."
"JUDGE MACKAY: ..... In respect of the defendants, who are after all a public body instructing experienced solicitors and counsel, you expect to see what the defence is because if the defence isn't available on the pleaded case it is not likely to become available as the result of a judgment. Do you see what I mean?
MR McCULLOUGH: I take your Lordship's point and what I say in relation to that is that the claimant has been in no doubt since receiving Mr Winspur's report of the defendants' position; that the fracture position was satisfactory. Indeed they knew of it at a much earlier stage than that when they received a report from another expert."
"I would be happy to give your Lordship one but I'm sure Miss Perry would object."
"Further, I have read the statement by the plaintiff's medical advisors. Mr Hashimi suggests that the initial management and the reduction of the fracture was unacceptable. This is difficult to comprehend in that he gives no reasons to support his contention. As I have already indicated, having reviewed the radiographs, I would have to disagree with him. I considered that the position of the reduction to be adequate initially and acceptable ultimately when union had occurred. To reiterate, any imperfection in the position is irrelevant to her present symptomatology and would not have given rise to any significant disability beyond that she would have had in any event."
"Mr Hashemi agreed that there was perfect anatomical reduction in the affected joint in the x-rays after the third manipulation, and the only issue was the reduction in length of the radius which was on the x-ray available to the doctors after the third manipulation, about a millimetre long. It was put to him that this was insignificant; he disagreed. What he did not disagree with was that the x-rays on the 5th December and after the 5th December, and the x-ray of the 12th December in particular, demonstrated that the good anatomical reduction was maintained and that the 1 mm reduction had disappeared completely, and a week later, on the 19th December 1991, the x-ray showed less than half a millimetre shortening, and these differences in precise amounts are not to be the subject of any surprise because they can happen in any x-ray, which is itself 1.15 times the size of the digit being x-rayed."
"Mr Hashemi said, with regard to the x-ray of the 19th December 1991: `If this was the x-ray after the third manipulation I would be happy'. He said when I asked him, a few minutes later, had he been there at the time and he had been arguing for further manipulation after the third manipulation"
"and somebody else had been saying, `No, we don't need it', if he had won and they had had the manipulation"
"and they had the x-rays of the 19th December and the 12th December, would he have been happy, he said, yes, of course he would have been, and if the other person had won and there had been no manipulation then he would have been happy just the same.
So it seems clear to me, and that clarity was not taken away when Mr Winspur gave evidence, whose evidence I accept entirely. that there was plainly no negligence."
"There is a slight deformity of the wrist, in that the head of the ulna, the ulna styloid and the radial head are rather more prominent than the opposite side. All these findings can be attributed to the callus formation as a sequel to the Colles fracture that was slightly impacted in terms of the radial element."
"We write to confirm, on behalf of the Health Authority, the apology made in Court in respect of the inaccurate notes concerning Julia O'Brien's refusal of treatment. The Authority apologises for any distress to your client caused as a result of these inaccuracies or by the attitude of any of the treating clinicians."