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England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Protection Decisions >> A Clinical Commissioning Group v AF & Ors [2020] EWCOP 16 (27 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCOP/2020/16.html Cite as: [2020] EWCOP 16 |
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60 Canal Street Nottingham NG1 7EJ |
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B e f o r e :
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A CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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AF (by his litigation friend the Official Solicitor) |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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SJ |
2nd Respondent |
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- and - |
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A GP |
3rd Respondent |
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- and - |
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A LOCAL AUTHORITY |
4th Respondent |
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Sophia Roper (instructed by The Official Solicitor) for the 1st Respondent
Peter Mant (instructed by MJC Law) for the 2nd Respondent
John McKendrick QC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft) for the 3rd Respondent
Edward Lamb (instructed by Local Authority Legal Services) for the 4th Respondent
Hearing dates: 17-20 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mostyn:
i) SJ (from Nottingham)
ii) The GP (from the Midlands)
iii) Professor W, Consultant and Professor in Neurological Rehabilitation (from Oxford)
iv) Dr H, Consultant in Rehabilitation Medicine (from Kent)
v) PC, Care Home Manager (from the Midlands )
vi) MA, Lead Nurse (from the Midlands)
vii) SH, Activities Co-ordinator (from the Midlands)
viii) RM, Senior Care Support Worker (from the Midlands)
ix) Dr G, Consultant Neuropsychiatrist (from Northumberland)
x) BR, Dietician (from the Midlands)
xi) Dr P, Palliative Care Consultant (from the Midlands).
i) Subsection 6, which provides
"[The decision maker] must consider, so far as is reasonably ascertainable:
(a) the person's past and present wishes and feelings (and, in particular, any relevant written statement made by him when he had capacity),
(b) the beliefs and values that would be likely to influence his decision if he had capacity, and
(c) the other factors that he would be likely to consider if he were able to do so."
ii) Subsection 7, which provides so far as is relevant:
"[The decision maker] must take into account, if it is practicable and appropriate to consult them, the views of …
(b) anyone engaged in caring for the person or interested in his welfare …"
i) When assessing best interests, the exercise is first and foremost to consider matters from the point of view of the protected party: Aintree University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust v James [2013] UKSC 67 at [45].
ii) Welfare must be assessed in the widest sense, not merely medical but social and psychological also: ibid at [39].
iii) While there is a strong presumption in favour of the preservation of life this can in an appropriate case yield to the need to respect personal autonomy and dignity of the protected person and his right to self-determination: ibid at [35]. The strong presumption in favour of the preservation of life reflects the categorical terms of article 2 of the Convention, both in its mandatory and prohibitory aspects, as well as the terms of section 4 (5) of the 2005 Act.
"Working in a hospital for 30 years, he saw sickness and death. Death doesn't scare my Dad. What scared him was loss of dignity. He saw some of the worst situations people can be in and he would talk about that and say, "you shouldn't always keep people alive".
I honestly thought that my Dad had done something about it. He said it so many times, that he didn't want to be kept alive, that I can't believe he didn't write that down. When my disabled sister, K, was alive, he told me he had an envelope taped to the bottom of the chest of drawers with his will, and the name of the Home he wanted her to go to, and the names of the staff he employed to help look after her, and even the name of a van to be available as a taxi for me - honest to God, that's how organised he was. I can't believe that he did all that for my sister, and he did it for my Mum when she was dying with cancer, but he didn't do it for himself. I'm so angry with him about that. How could he not have done it for himself?!
He would never want to be just a body in a bed. I heard his passion about this, and now we're living it. Everything that he used to say for all those years about the people in the hospital, now we're living it. And I'm failing him, because he would want to be just let go."
"Because my dad worked in hospital, he would often talk about the fact that it is cruel to keep people in a bed for so long if they can't do anything for themselves. He would often say it was not how it should be, being "a body in a bed" and that he wouldn't want to be that way. He spoke about the indignity of being in such a situation. He was a very dignifed man. He would make remarks such as 'just put me in a corner by the range with a gun and I'll sort it out meself'. His wishes and feelings about this could not have been clearer."
i) Up to 12 May 2016 AF ate and drank voluntarily. However, on that day he started to refuse food and was saying that he wanted to die. He was however dysphagic and extremely confused.
ii) On 19 May 2016 the decision was taken that he did not have capacity and that it was in his interests for him to be fed through a nasogastric tube. Attempts were made to insert the tube, but AF resisted stating that he wished to die. It is common ground that insertion of a nasogastric tube is extremely unpleasant and painful.
iii) On 21 May 2016 the tube was successfully inserted. There is a record that AF turned to his daughter and said "this is wrong".
iv) Notwithstanding that he was made to wear mittens in order to prevent the tube being removed there is a record that on 23 May 2016 AF removed the tube.
v) On 24 May 2016 the tube was reinserted with a bridle to prevent removal. Nevertheless, on 1 June 2016 AF managed to pull it out and was very distressed when staff endeavoured to reintroduce it.
vi) On 7 June 2016 the PEG was inserted under sedation. It is recorded that he continued to state that he wished to die. On 2 July 2016 he resisted feeding via the PEG.
vii) On 8 July 2016 AF is recorded as having refused feeding and stating that he wished to die and to be with his wife and daughter, both of whom had died, as explained above.
viii) On 15 July 2016 AF told the psychiatrist, Dr C, that he wished to die but he also told him that he wished to live.
ix) On 25 July 2016 AF told the IMCA that he wanted to die because of the stroke. He was in tears when he said this. He said, "I long to be dead".
i) Notwithstanding that he is presumably full up by virtue of the PEG feed, and therefore not hungry, he does enjoy certain foods. He enjoys in very modest amounts spicy food from time to time. He enjoys doughnuts, chips, toast and cake, again intermittently. Although he does not drink daily he likes coffee and hot chocolate. There is agreement that of itself the amount that he ingests orally would not be enough to sustain his life.
ii) He enjoys receiving a wash of his back.
iii) He enjoys animals. One of the carers had an old labrador called Y, now sadly put to sleep. He would be very pleased when Y lay on his bed and he could hold him and feel his wet nose. I have seen a photograph of AF holding Y on his bed; AF is beaming. I have also seen a photograph of AF beaming when a small Shetland pony was brought into his room.
iv) He enjoys the company of children. PC brought her grandchild in to meet AF. AF described him as beautiful and asked if he could hug him. PC was stunned by this. Other children have been brought to meet AF; he has much enjoyed their company.
v) AF enjoys listening to music from a visiting musician. I have seen a most affecting video of the musician playing Irish Eyes with AF plainly enraptured and marking the beat with his hand.
vi) AF enjoys listening to an Irish radio station on a digital radio. He enjoys watching television and especially watching the Irish rugby team.
vii) I was told by SH, the activities coordinator, that she had read AF poetry from an anthology belonging to her father. She read him poems by the war poets, Rupert Brooke, Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen. She told me that these "really hit the spot". He became emotional and his eyes filled with tears. She asked: "should I stop?" He shook his head. She asked: "Should I carry on?" He nodded.
viii) Although his verbal communication is limited it is not non-existent. He is normally monosyllabic, but occasionally full sentences are formed. He also communicates well non-verbally. RM told me that he is a very good communicator either by eye contact or gestures.
ix) AF will not let anyone into his mouth, not even the visiting dentist. It may be that he is suffering from mouth ulcers which may account for his reluctance to eat. That aside, there is no obvious source of any pain, and AF does not display any signs of pain.
i) I have fully considered AF's past wishes. Before the stroke AF did not make a relevant written statement. His oral statements to his family cannot be construed as being applicable to anything more than a descent to a vegetative or minimally conscious or equivalent state. They cannot be construed as being applied to his present condition. Following the stroke AF's statements were made at a time when he crossed the boundary into incapacity and cannot be construed as a rational and considered wish for self-destruction.
ii) I find it virtually impossible to answer the hypothetical and counterfactual question of what AF's beliefs and values would be if he had capacity today. In that event of course there would not be a case in the Court of Protection. I think it unlikely that if he were granted a brief window of lucidity, he would reach the conclusion that he would be better off dead rather than to continue with the limited life that he presently enjoys. He would recognise that he is not in the grips of a terminal illness leading inevitably to an unpleasant and painful death. I do not think that were he granted that brief window of lucidity he would ask to be taken at once to Dignitas.
iii) I do not consider that there are any other factors that he would be likely to consider if he were able to do so.
iv) The views of SJ have been clearly set out above. I have taken full account of them. The views of the GP and the carers at the care home are that it is unthinkable that AF should be in effect starved to death. They would not be prepared to participate in such a process which would mean that AF would have to move elsewhere. Even if that were possible at the present time, and it is not, such a move would inevitably cause disturbance and distress to AF.
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