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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 >> Cavanagh & Ors v Health Service Commissioner [2005] EWCA Civ 1578 (15 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1578.html Cite as: [2006] 1 WLR 1229, [2006] WLR 1229, [2005] EWCA Civ 1578 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE HENRIQUES)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
NICHOLAS CAVANAGH RAYMOND BHATT FRANK REDMOND |
1stAppellant 2nd Appellant 3rd Appellant |
|
- and - |
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THE HEALTH SERVICE COMMISSIONER |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Grace QC (instructed by Harcus Sinclair, solicitors) for the 2nd Appellant
Miss J Richards (instructed by Leigh Day & Co, solicitors) for the 3rd Appellant
Ms N Lieven (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
The appeals
The law
3. (1) On a complaint duly made to a Commissioner by or on behalf of a person that he has sustained injustice or hardship in consequence of –
(a) a failure in a service provided by a health service body,
(b) a failure of such a body to provide a service which it was a function of the body to provide, or
(c) maladministration connected with any other action taken by or on behalf of such a body.
the Commissioner may, subject to the provisions of this Act, investigate the alleged failure or other action.
(2) In determining whether to initiate, continue or discontinue an investigation under this Act, a Commissioner shall act in accordance with his own discretion.
….
(4) Nothing in this Act authorises or requires a Commissioner to question the merits of a decision taken without maladministration by a health service body in the exercise of a discretion vested in that body.
11. (1) Where a Commissioner proposes to conduct an investigation pursuant to a complaint under this Act, he shall afford –
(a) to the health service body concerned, and
(b) to any other person who is alleged in the complaint to have taken or authorised the action complained of,
an opportunity to comment on any allegations contained in the complaint.
(2) An investigation shall be conducted in private.
(3) In other respects, the procedure for conducting an investigation shall be such as the Commissioner considers appropriate in the circumstances of the case, and in particular –
(a) he may obtain information from such persons and in such manner, and make such inquiries, as he thinks fit, and
(b) he may determine whether any person may be represented, by counsel or solicitor or otherwise, in the investigation.
….
(5) The conduct of an investigation shall not affect any action taken by the health service body concerned, or any power or duty of that body to take further action with respect to any matters subject to the investigation.
15(1) Information obtained by the Commissioner or his officers in the course of or for the purpose of an investigation shall not be disclosed except –
(a) for the purposes of the investigation and any report to be made in respect of it,
….
(e) where the information is to the effect that any person is likely to constitute a threat to the health or safety of patients as permitted by subsection (1B).
(1A) Subsection (1B) applies where, in the course of an investigation, the Commissioner or any of his officers obtains information which –
(a) does not fall to be disclosed for the purposes of the investigation or any report to be made in respect of it, and
(b) is to the effect that a person is likely to constitute a threat to the health or safety of patients.
(1B) In a case within subsection (1)(e) the Commissioner may disclose the information to any persons to whom he thinks it should be disclosed in the interests of the health and safety of patients; and a person to whom disclosure may be made, for instance, be a body which regulates the profession to which the person mentioned in subsection (1A)(b) belongs or his employer or any person with whom he has made arrangements to provide services.
"The fact that the process is investigative and inquisitorial rather than a form of litigation between the parties …. does not mean that the medical service committee or the authority is entitled to investigate and make findings on matters not the subject of complaint."
The Report
To first pair of Assessors:-
20 December 2001
……
As the investigating officer for this case I am writing to provide documents which are relevant to the complaint and to explain what happens next. I enclose a copy of the Commissioner's statement of complaint and copies of the patient's clinical notes. I also enclose two documents which were prepared as briefing papers for a meeting here, the case analysis and a paper in which the main stages of the complaint are summarised and issues that need to be considered raised, along with a selection of the relevant background papers and correspondence.
…….
I can confirm that the case conference will be held at 2.30pm on 23 January 2002 here at the Millbank Tower…
Please note that we are not asking you to write a report at this stage. It would be helpful if before the case conference you could form preliminary views about the lines of questioning which might usefully be pursued in the investigation, which staff should be interviewed and whether you wished to be involved in interviews yourself. We would find helpful your views on the following questions:
- Tessa's diagnosis; is the diagnosis clear?
- Who would best look after Tessa? Does she need a specialist physician or pathologist?
- Who would be able to provide treatment in the UK?
- Have the appropriate tests been done and are there others which could/should be done?
- Clinical view of care provided so far and anything else which could/should have been done?
We will consider these matters at the case conference. …..
…..It is for the Commissioner's external assessors to decide on the process by which they produce their report, which must address those issues in the statement of complaint which relate to the exercise of clinical judgment. You are also invited to make any recommendations which could improve the quality of care. …..
Finally, may I remind you that the test applied by the Commissioner is 'whether the clinical actions of professional staff fell below a standard which the patient could reasonably have expected in the circumstances'. Your eventual conclusions should include a clear view on that point.
………
Yours sincerely
Ms Christine Moulder
Investigating Officer
To the second pair of Assessors
22 May 2002
…….
You will see from the letters from Professor Leonard and Professor Rosenblatt that there has been much concern about the critical results on which to base the diagnosis of Tessa Redmond's problems. You will also see that Dr Jane Collins, Chief Executive of Great Ormond Street Hospital has indicated to the Medical Director at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital that she would be willing to receive a referral of Tessa.
We do have a preliminary report from the B12 assessors which is currently at draft stage and which we hope to be able to provide for discussion when we meet. ……
…………….
Please note that we are not asking you to write a report at this stage. It would be helpful if before we meet you could form preliminary views about the lines of questioning which might usefully be pursued in the investigation and the questions you think should be put to Dr Cavanagh. We would find helpful your views on the following questions:
- Tessa's diagnosis; is the diagnosis clear?
- Who would best look after Tessa? Does she need a specialist physician or pathologist?
- The availability of appropriate treatment in the UK?
- Have the appropriate tests been done and are there others which could/should be done?
- Clinical view of care provided so far and anything else which could/should have been done?
….. It is for the Commissioner's external assessors to decide on the process by which they produce their report, which must address those issues in the statement of complaint which relate to the exercise of clinical judgment. You are also invited to make any recommendations which could improve the quality of care. We can discuss that, and the date for submitting the report, at the case conference.
Finally, may I remind you that the test applied by the Commissioner is 'whether the clinical actions of professional staff fell below a standard which the patient could reasonably have expected in the circumstances'. Your eventual conclusions should include a clear view on that point.
………..
Yours sincerely
Ms Christine Moulder
Senior Investigating Officer
50. This investigation has been into the arrangements for monitoring and treating Miss Redmond. I do not underestimate the difficulties for any parents in caring for a child with Miss Redmond's problems nor the extensive efforts they must make in order to obtain appropriate care. I would like to acknowledge the commitment Mr Redmond has demonstrated towards his daughter and express my sympathy about the troubles he has encountered in his attempts to secure appropriate treatment for her. The chronology of events, the personal evidence, and the expert advice of my Assessors, make clear that the arrangements for his daughter's care have been completely unsatisfactory. My hope is, after the issue of this lengthy report, that arrangements will be initiated, once and for all, which will provide the stable basis for the future treatment and monitoring which Miss Redmond will need.
51. It seems to me that the second Chief Executive's description – that there are effectively four main elements to this complaint – is accurate; that is an appropriate point at which to begin a consideration of the events of the last five or six years. First there was the closure of the B12 Unit at the hospital. This was the Unit where, for a while, Dr F was in charge and where Miss Redmond received her initial treatment – from him. It is not the purpose of this report to establish the rights and wrongs of the closure of the B12 Unit, but it is clear to me that the action taken by the Trust was legitimately within their discretion. It is also clear that circumstances at the time were seen to be sufficiently troubled that an independent report into the Unit's functioning was commissioned via the Institute of Child Health. In brief, therefore, all involved (Miss Redmond's parents, Dr F, the Paediatric Neurologist, and all other interested parties) would have had to accept in 1997 that the service provision within the Trust was changing and that the arrangements for Miss Redmond would have to take account of that. Thus, the closure of the Unit was a fixed point in this chronology; basing any hopes for Miss Redmond's future treatment on the Unit's re–instatement would have been unrealistic.
52. The second Chief Executive has suggested that another source of the continuing problems about arranging care for Miss Redmond was her parents' commitment to her receipt of ongoing B12 treatment. Like the second Chief Executive and others who have been interviewed, I too have no doubt that Mr and Mrs Redmond genuinely believed, and continue to believe, that the root cause of Miss Redmond's problems was associated with her B12 status: the evidence of their own eyes was that she improved significantly soon after receiving her B12 injections, and they clearly also trusted the opinions expressed to them by Dr F and Professor O: Mr Redmond told my staff that that was so. I also note that the diagnosis offered by Dr F has been consistently reinforced by the comments of the Paediatric Neurologist, whose liaison with Mr and Mrs Redmond has clearly been very close and who has promoted Dr F's standing as an expert.
53. However, on the basis of what I have seen and the advice I have been given it appears that there are serious questions about Dr F's diagnosis and that these questions underpin the difficulties there have been in organising appropriate treatment for Miss Redmond. The Assessors (who I asked to report to me separately) have all concluded that there is no sustainable evidence that Miss Redmond ever suffered from a disorder of Vitamin B12 metabolism or from Vitamin B12 deficiency. They have advised me that the only evidence to support such a diagnosis is in the reports of increased MMA in the urine (an indication of adenosylcobalamin deficiency present in disorders of Vitamin B12 metabolism). In Miss Redmond's case there are two sources of reports of high MMA results. First, Dr F is quoted in Miss Redmond's clinical notes as reporting high MMA results. However there are no printed laboratory reports of these test results, which would be normal practice, and it is unclear where or how these tests were performed. I should make it clear here, that I believe that I have been provided with all the relevant clinical records. Secondly, there was a single result from GOSH in which the MMA in the urine was so high that the result must be considered unsound; that high result was not supported by a blood test taken the previous day. All other tests that have been undertaken were in the normal range and did not support such a diagnosis. In the Assessors' opinion Miss Redmond's Vitamin B12 status is normal and there is no biochemical or haematological evidence to support a diagnosis of an abnormality of Vitamin B12 metabolism. I have therefore concluded that the view that Miss Redmond's problems stem from B12 deficiency, or a fault in B12 metabolism, or that the regular injections of B12 that she has been receiving are treating her fundamental problem, is not sustained by the evidence.
54. I would like to reassure Mr Redmond that I am satisfied that the Assessors I have appointed to advise me are appropriate experts in their fields, and that they provide the correct context in which to view Miss Redmond's health problems. I realise that Mr Redmond has in the past disputed the competence of any UK specialist to provide advice about his daughter's care. Having taken my own advice about this, and taking into account that Mr Redmond has no clinical qualifications, I would ask him to reconsider his views.
55. The Assessors have advised me that Miss Redmond has been given regular B12 injections without solid laboratory evidence of their necessity. The Assessors have also concluded that it is likely that Miss Redmond has a genetic cause for her epilepsy unrelated to any Vitamin B12 disorder and which has yet to be investigated. They have advised me that suitable expertise is available in the UK and that continued insistence on Dr F or a 'B12 expert' from outside of the UK as the only people who can treat Miss Redmond is unacceptable. They recommend referral to GOSH where there are internationally recognised experts capable of assessing and treating Miss Redmond. Clearly it is now essential that Miss Redmond is thoroughly reassessed and her treatment put on a new footing. I appreciate that this finding on my part may come as a shock to Mr and Mrs Redmond and one that they may find hard to accept. I am concerned that they may have reached their view that Miss Redmond's B12 status is the major factor in her health after taking advice from others – I will deal with the adequacy of some of the clinical views expressed, later. I now urge Mr and Mrs Redmond to consider very carefully the evidence presented in my report and, having done so, to co–operate fully with any future reassessment and treatment for their daughter in order that she may be provided with the care that she will need.
56. A major factor in all of this has been the influence of Dr F. As I have said previously, I pass no comment on his running of the B12 unit or on whether, at the time, he had the appropriate skills, knowledge or experience to be in that position. I note that he is not on the GMC's specialist register and I conclude from that that the Trust were correct in stating that he could not take responsibility, in his own right, as a Consultant, for his own patients. I do not understand why Mr Redmond and the Paediatric Neurologist have claimed at various points that they could see no reason why Dr F should not be taking fuller responsibility for Miss Redmond at the Trust: it seems to me that the reason for that has been made obvious. Mr Redmond has said that Dr F's manner, his thoroughness and his obvious interest in his patients' welfare impressed him and his wife from the very start. I have no doubt that that was true, and that Mr and Mrs Redmond experienced Dr F as supportive to them in the difficult task of caring for their daughter. From those positive beginnings Dr F came to be held by the Redmonds in a very favourable light. That position was, no doubt, reinforced by the opinions of the Paediatric Neurologist. However, I note with great concern the views of my Assessors about Dr F's involvement with Miss Redmond. From their comments it appears that his whole approach to Miss Redmond's diagnosis may have been fundamentally misjudged. He has been unable to provide any reliable evidence (in the form of clinical test results) to substantiate his diagnosis and I see no reason to trust the reliability of the claims which he has made for Miss Redmond's test results over the years. Indeed, a particular test result, which yielded an extraordinarily high level of MMA in urine, was clearly a very significant outlier in the pattern of Miss Redmond's other tests. Yet, Dr F thought it appropriate to take this exceptional reading into account in his suggestions for the management of Miss Redmond. I do not know how that result occurred; there must be some suspicion that someone had adulterated the urine sample – which was not taken under controlled in–patient conditions.
57. It is clear from what I have said above that I not only share the Trust's view that Dr F lacked the formal accreditation needed for him to act autonomously within the Trust's employment, but I also have additional concerns which are related to the specific details of his practice and conduct in this case.
58. The second Chief Executive has suggested that the fourth element in the complaint concerns the Paediatric Neurologist. In considering his involvement with Miss Redmond over recent years, I have been struck by the contradictory contributions which he has made. It has been a consistent theme of his that, as a neurologist, he did not have the necessary specific B12 knowledge to advise on that part of Miss Redmond's care. He has said that it would have been wrong for him to do so. I believe that there is some legitimacy in that point: the GMC guidance is that doctors should only hand over patients to other practitioners who are competent and they should not themselves act outside of their own competence. Thus, on the face of it, the Paediatric Neurologist's position might have seemed reasonable, even if, on occasions when he had seemed to be going along with suggestions for arranging Miss Redmond's care, he then withdrew his support – sometimes on the basis (he claimed) that he could not understand why the funding Health Authority needed to be involved, or why the Trust could not employ Dr F themselves. However, the Paediatric Neurologist cannot have it both ways. If he wished to use the rationale of his own lack of expertise to avoid taking overall clinical responsibility, as consultant, for Miss Redmond's care under Dr F, it is logically inconsistent that he should have vouched so strongly for a referral to Dr F. In doing so, I believe, he was strongly encouraging a referral to a practitioner in whom he appeared to lack confidence: to the extent that he refused to take responsibility for the practitioner's clinical actions.
59. From the evidence of Mr Redmond, and of the Paediatric Neurologist himself, his involvement in Miss Redmond's care was much appreciated by her parents and his contact with them seems to have been frequent and close. I am, however, concerned that on occasions this extended to sending them copies of correspondence which he was having with the management of the Trust relating to his own employment situation, or to general matters within the Trust, or making criticisms of letters written by others, rather than specifically to the care of Miss Redmond. I believe that these actions were questionable and, possibly, unprofessional. Further, I am concerned that he should have promoted the cause of Dr F who, as I have explained, the evidence suggests, was making unsound or unjustified diagnoses. I have also noted with concern the further inconsistency that while the Paediatric Neurologist claimed to have insufficient B12 knowledge to assume overall responsibility for Miss Redmond's care, his views about that seemed to be contradicted by his authorship of apparently relevant clinical guidance. My Assessors point out that, in any event, he might reasonably have been expected, from a neurological standpoint, to have taken a specific interest in the tests and monitoring connected with Miss Redmond's metabolic state.
60. Fundamentally then I have concluded that Mr Redmond, encouraged by the actions or opinions of Dr F and the Paediatric Neurologist, remained focused unreasonably on the closure of the B12 Unit and on there being a difference between inborn errors of metabolism and vitamin B12 deficiency which called for unique expertise. From that position Mr Redmond, and those from whom he chose to take his advice, continued to press for Miss Redmond to be referred to B12 experts and as a consequence obstructed her referral to appropriate centres within the UK. I recommend that a review of Miss Redmond's needs, in the widest sense, should take place, and that the Trust should press strongly with all the relevant agencies for that to happen, and that they should seek to involve all the relevant local agencies in that review. I appreciate the difficulties with which this may present Mr Redmond but strongly urge him to co–operate with such a review. I would like to point out to him through this report that his refusal to do so previously has been on the basis of misleading and, I believe, incorrect clinical advice.
61. I turn now to whether the Trust has been responsible for this failure to make adequate arrangements to monitor and treat Miss Redmond. It is clear to me that there have been times when senior members of the Trust's management, or of its Board, have attempted to press for appropriate action but that those attempts have been thwarted by others. I single out the Paediatric Neurologist, for whose actions the Trust are responsible, for his failure to co–operate and for his insistence on promoting the expertise of Dr F. His refusal to refer Miss Redmond to other centres, such as GOSH, appears to be clear evidence of him working counter to Miss Redmond's interests. It is possible that even in the face of this lack of co–operation from a key clinician, the Trust might have forced through the necessary arrangements, but I doubt it: especially given the Paediatric Neurologist's apparent influence over Mr Redmond's opinions. It also seems to me that co–operation with and by the Health Authority was at times lacking, although I stress it has not been the purpose of this investigation to look in detail at processes within the Authority.
62. Overall, in view of the mitigating factors represented by the actions of Dr F, the Paediatric Neurologist, other agencies and Mr Redmond himself, I limit my criticism of the Trust. Although I note that on previous occasions the GMC has told the Trust – which has obviously wanted at times to bring the clinicians involved to account – that there were no grounds for proceedings, I recommend that the Trust arrange an external review of the operation of the Paediatric Neurologist's team. I referred my concerns about Dr F and the Paediatric Neurologist to the General Medical Council on 2 October 2003. I uphold the complaint against the Trust, but to the very limited extent described.
Conclusions
63. I have set out my findings in paragraphs 50 to 62. The Trust has asked me to convey – as I do through my report – its apologies to Mr Redmond for the shortcomings I have identified and has agreed to implement the recommendations in paragraphs 60 and 62.
The complaint
"The hub [sic] of Mr Redmond's complaints concerns the fact that the Trust is prejudiced towards [Dr Bhatt] (who was once employed by the medical school and had an honorary contract with this Trust) who headed up the B12 Unit up until 1995. He has accused the Trust of forcing [Dr Cavanagh] (who is Miss Redmond's consultant at the Chelsea and Westminster) to take responsibility for treatment in which he has no expertise. He also believes that the Cheslea and Westminster Hospital houses the necessary facilities to treat his daughter for her complex metabolic disorder.
….
It will be seen from the extensive correspondence that considerable effort has been made by the Trust to facilitate the treatment of Miss Redmond. The arrangement put in place in November 1999 was working well until April 2000 when [Dr Cavanagh] stated that he was not prepared to take responsibility for Miss Redmond's overall care which includes B12 treatment. The position with regard to the overall responsibility of patient care has been explained to both Mr Redmond and [Dr Cavanagh]…"
"24. At interview the second Chief Executive said that there were four key elements in the complaint. First, the Trust lacked a B12 facility after the closure of the B12 unit. The Board had decided in 1996, 1997 and 2001 that B12 treatment could not be safely provided within the Trust. Secondly, Mr and Mrs Redmond seemed committed to B12 treatment even though a link between B12 treatment and Miss Redmond's seizures remained unproven: the Trust's Medical director had told the Second Chief Executive that he continued to have doubts about the validity of B12 treatment."
The underlining is ours.
The assessors' reports
"(i) the Trust should obtain an external review of Miss Redmond's medical condition;
(ii) the Trust should consider an external review of the operation of [Dr Cavanagh's] team;
(iii) a referral of [Dr Bhatt] to the GMC should be considered."
"(3) It is unacceptable for there to be a continued insistence that only [Dr Bhatt] or a 'B12 expert' outside this country can look after Miss Redmond as there are acknowledged B12 experts in the UK; and
(4) GOSH [Great Ormond Street Hospital] has expressed a willingness to reassess and to treat Miss Redmond, and that hospital has internationally recognised staff who are capable of doing so. We recommend this course of action."
Did the Report go beyond the Commissioner's powers?
"This investigation has been into the arrangements for monitoring and treating Miss Redmond."
But as is evident from the rest of the findings, the investigation, which no doubt ought to have been as the Commissioner described it, had become an investigation into the clinical justification for these arrangements, and thence into the professional standards and conduct of the two doctors responsible for them.
- In the first part of paragraph 53 the Commissioner expresses the view that the questions attending Dr Bhatt's diagnosis "underpin the difficulties there have been in organising appropriate treatment for Miss Redmond". Neither the complaint nor the matters elicited in its investigation afford a foundation for this statement. The difficulties of which Mr Redmond was complaining did not arise from doubts about the diagnosis.
- At the end of paragraph 53 the Commissioner reaches her own (negative) clinical judgment about the nature of Tess's condition. This was not a topic of complaint; nor was a decision about it relevant to the resolution of the complaint.
- The first part of paragraph 56 would by itself be a perfectly proper approach to the complaint. It deals with the allocation of professional responsibility for Tess's treatment. The latter part of the paragraph, however, returns to the question of Dr Bhatt's competence, and the following paragraph, together with a further remark in the next paragraph but one about his making "unsound or unjustified diagnoses", completes a highly damaging commentary on this practitioner.
- While the consideration of Dr Cavanagh's role in paragraphs 58 and 59 is related to the material question of clinical responsibility, the comments on his role in paragraph 61 are damaging in the extreme. They include a finding that "his refusal to refer Miss Redmond to other centres, such as GOSH, appears to be clear evidence of him working counter to Miss Redmond's interests".
- Paragraph 60 brings these critiques home to Mr Redmond's complaint by calling in question the assumed need for B12 therapy. It overlooks the fact that the need was mutually assumed.
- For these reasons the complaint was upheld – in paragraph 61 - only to the token extent of holding the Trust answerable for a breakdown caused by the incompetence, or worse, of one practitioner and the obstinacy, or worse, of another.
Conclusions
Note 1 With effect from 1 April 1996: Health Service Commissioners (Amendment) Act 1996 (Commencement) Order 1996, §2. [Back]