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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Kirklees Council v Re [2014] EWHC 3182 (Fam) (03 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2014/3182.html Cite as: [2014] Fam Law 1679, (2015) 142 BMLR 170, 142 BMLR 170, [2015] 1 FLR 1316, [2015] FLR 1316, [2014] EWHC 3182 (Fam), [2015] 2 FCR 438 |
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Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Kirklees Council |
Applicant |
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RE |
First Respondent |
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-and- |
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SE (by his Guardian, Steven Anderson) |
Second Respondent |
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-and- |
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Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust |
Third Respondent |
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Ms Lisa Phillips for the First Respondent
Ms Martha Cover for the Second Respondent
Ms Katie Gollop for the Third Respondent
Hearing date: 19th August 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MOOR:-
"We would plan to reduce his respiratory support to enable him to be taken outside of the neonatal unit for walks or even discharged to a hospice for ongoing care. We would continue to feed him. We would continue to provide symptom relief should he become agitated in the form of oromorph, chloral hydrate or buccal midazolam. If he got a chest infection, we would treat him with oral rather than intravenous antibiotics to save him the distress of multiple IV cannulae".
The relevant history
The need for the application
"If the local authority achieves a care order, it gains parental responsibility and the power to restrict the natural parents' authority or that of any other person who would normally carry such authority. Parents can appeal to the High Court and to the Court of Appeal."
The law to be applied
(a) To decide what is in the best interests of SE;
(b) In doing so, his welfare is my paramount consideration;
(c) To look at the matter from his assumed point of view;
(d) To start with the strong presumption in favour of the course of action that would prolong life but that presumption is not irrebuttable;
(e) To consider his medical, emotional and all other welfare issues when considering his best interests; and
(f) To conduct a balancing exercise in which all relevant factors are weighed.
(i) "As a dispute has arisen between the treating doctors and the parents, and one, and now both, parties have asked the court to make a decision, it is the role and duty of the court to do so and to exercise its own independent and objective judgment.
(ii) The right and power of the court to do so only arises because the patient, in this case because he is a child, lacks the capacity to make a decision for himself.
(iii) I am not deciding what decision I might make for myself if I was, hypothetically, in the position of the patient; nor for a child of my own if in that situation; nor whether the respective decisions of the doctors on the one hand or the parents on the other are reasonable decisions.
(iv) The matter must be decided by the application of an objective approach or test.
(v) That test is the best interests of the patient. Best interests are used in the widest sense and include every kind of consideration capable of impacting on the decision. These include, non-exhaustively, medical, emotional, sensory (pleasure, pain and suffering) and instinctive (the human instinct to survive) considerations.
(vi) It is impossible to weigh such considerations mathematically, but the court must do the best it can to balance all the conflicting considerations in a particular case and see where the final balance of interests lies.
(vii) Considerable weight (Lord Donaldson of Lymington referred to a "very strong presumption") must be attached to the prolongation of life because the individual human instinct and desire to survive is strong and must be presumed to be strong in the patient. But it is not absolute, nor necessarily decisive; and may be outweighed if the pleasures and quality of life are sufficiently small and the pain and suffering or other burdens of living are sufficiently great.
(viii) These considerations remain well expressed in the words as relatively long ago as 1991 of Lord Donaldson of Lymington in Re J (A minor) (wardship: medical treatment) [1991] Fam 33 at page 46 where he said: "There is without doubt a very strong presumption in favour of a course of action which will prolong life, but…it is not irrebuttable…Account has to be taken of the pain and suffering and quality of life which the child will experience if life is prolonged. Account has also to be taken of the pain and suffering involved in the proposed treatment…We know that the instinct and desire for survival is very strong. We all believe in and assert the sanctity of human life…Even very severely handicapped people find a quality of life rewarding which to the unhandicapped may seem manifestly intolerable. People have an amazing adaptability. But in the end there will be cases in which the answer must be that it is not in the interests of the child to subject it to treatment which will cause it increased suffering and produce no commensurate benefit, giving the fullest possible weight to the child's and mankind's desire to survive."
(ix) All these cases are very fact specific, ie they depend entirely on the facts of the individual case.
(x) The views and opinions of both the doctors and the parents must be carefully considered. Where, as in this case, the parents spend a great deal of time with their child, their views may have particular value because they know the patient and how he reacts so well; although the court needs to be mindful that the views of any parents may, very understandably, be coloured by their own emotion or sentiment. It is important to stress that the reference is to the views and opinions of the parents. Their own wishes, however understandable in human terms, are wholly irrelevant to the consideration of the objective best interests of the child save to the extent in any given case that they may illuminate the quality and value to the child of the child/parent relationship."
(a) The question is not whether it would be in the patient's best interests to withhold those treatments should they become necessary in order to sustain life. The correct and fundamental question is whether it is in the best interests of a patient, and therefore lawful, to give medical treatment. If the court concludes that the treatment is not in the child's best interests then it will not consent to the treatment.
(b) It sets the goal too high to say that treatment is futile unless it has a "real prospect of curing or at least palliating the life-threatening disease or illness from which the patient is suffering". The correct approach is to consider whether the proposed treatment would be futile in the sense of being ineffective or being of no benefit to the patient.
(c) It is also not appropriate to define "no prospect of recovery" to mean "no prospect of recovering such a state of good health as will avert the looming prospect of death if the life-sustaining is given". Baroness Hale said at Paragraph 44 that "where a patient is suffering from an incurable illness, disease or disability, it is not very helpful to talk of recovering a good state of health. The patient's life may still be very well worth living".
(d) The court must be cautious about making declarations in circumstances which were not fully predictable or were fluctuating.
(e) Baroness Hale rejected the suggestion that the test of the patient's wishes and feelings was an objective one, namely what the reasonable patient would think. The purpose of the best interests test is to consider matters from the patient's point of view. Insofar as it is possible to ascertain the patient's wishes and feelings, his beliefs and values or the things which were important to him, it is those which should be taken into account because they are a component in making the choice which is right for him as an individual.
The expert evidence
My conclusions