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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Astley (A minor) v Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2023] EWHC 1921 (KB) (28 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/1921.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1921 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
35 Vernon Street, Liverpool, L2 2BX |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Jayden Astley (A minor by his father and litigation friend Craig Astley) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
Defendant |
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Ms Sarah Pritchard KC (instructed by Hempsons Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 3rd - 7th July 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Martin Spencer:
Introduction
(i) MRI imaging of Jayden's brain dated 1 August 2012 was consistent with an acute, near-total, profound hypoxic-ischaemic insult;
(ii) Jayden was born in an asphyxiated condition, with a heart-rate of less than 40 beats per minute (the range of normality is 110-160 bpm);
(iii) Circulation to his brain was restored when his heart-rate increased to over 100 bpm: this was not until 7 minutes after birth;
(iv) A normal, healthy fetus/baby can withstand 10 minutes of APH before the brain starts to become damaged;
(v) The APH commenced approximately 8 minutes before birth, and was caused by umbilical cord compression or occlusion;
(vi) During that period of prenatal APH, the fetal heart-rate would have been severely bradycardic (probably in the region of 40 bpm);
(vii) The APH became damaging from around 2 minutes after birth;
(viii) Delivery 3 or more minutes earlier than the actual time of birth would have avoided all permanent brain damage.
15:03 Start of APH and severe bradycardia;
15:08 Time by when delivery of Jayden would have avoided all permanent brain damage;
15:11 Time of actual delivery: Jayden born severely asphyxiated with a HR of 40 bpm or less;
15:13 Start of brain-damaging APH;
15:18 Restoration of circulation to brain and cessation of APH, by which time Jayden had sustained 5 minutes of brain-damaging APH.
In the above context, the principal issue at trial was whether there was negligence on the part of the hospital staff in the management of the labour of Jayden's mother, Janene, and whether, but for such negligence, Jayden would have been delivered at or before 15:08 so as to avoid all permanent brain damage.
The Detailed Factual History
10:10 |
Mother admitted by M/W Kong to Royal Preston Hospital maternity unit. "No documented birth plan". No SRM or show. Fetal movements felt |
10:20 |
First VE: 5cm dilated, station -2. Estimated liquor: normal. Membranes ??intact "?tight to head". Commenced on entonox |
10:20 |
Management plan devised |
10:30 |
Supported by partner and mum. Nil loss PV. Conts 4:10 moderate on palpation. FH heard |
11:00 |
Conts 4:10 moderate FH heard |
11:00 |
Nil loss PV at present conts 4:10 |
11:25 |
Nil loss PV. Conts strong 4:10 |
11:35 |
Pushing with conts. Nil visible. Nil loss pv. FH heard 146 bpm |
11:50 |
VE: 7-8 cm dilated. Membranes: already ruptured. Liquor: none. FHR 140. Findings discussed. Turned on R side. Conts 4:10 strong |
12:00 |
Conts 4:10. On R side. B/S show pv |
12:15 |
[min] B/S liquor pv. B/S show. Conts 4:10. Strong |
12:45 |
Nil visible no external signs. Show + B/s liquor PV. Conts 4:10 |
13:00 |
Min B/S liquor + show PV. Conts 4:10. Lying on L side |
13:30 |
Show PV. Conts 4:10 |
13:45 |
Conts 4:10. Show PV VE: fully dilated. Head at spines. Liquor blood stained minimal. FHR 144. following VE. MP 90
|
13:50 |
FH 140. MP 88. Conts 4:10 strong. Show PV |
13:55 |
FH 136 MP 90. Nil loss PV |
14:00 |
Conts 4:10 FH 144 MP 90 Mucusey show PV |
14:05 |
nil visible. FH134 Birth stool suggested as an alternative position → Happy to try |
14:10 |
Now on birth stool. Nil visible, FH 147 MP 88 nil loss PV |
14:15 |
nil loss PV FH 140 MP 92. nil visible |
14:20 |
pushing well on stool. Nil visible, conts 4:10. FH heard & regular 140bpm MP88 |
14:25 |
FH150 MP90 nil visible. Nil loss PV. Conts 4:10 strong |
14:30 |
FH147 MP90 |
14:35 |
FH154 MP86 |
14:40 |
Conts 4:10 strong & expulsive. Nil visible. Nil loss PV |
14:45 |
Back onto bed as uncomfortable on stool now. Conts 4:10 Strong. Pushing with conts VX just visible. FH148 MP90 |
14:50 |
VX advancing slowly. pushing with conts. Janine tired, encouraged & reassured. Mucusey show PV. FH138 MP92 |
14:55 |
VX advancing. FH140 MP90 nil loss PV. Conts strong 4:10 |
15:00 |
VX advancing FH134 MP90. nil loss PV. Conts strong 4:10 |
15:05 |
VX advancing with conts. FH132 MP88. Buzzed for Second midwife |
15:07 |
Sr Dunkley present in room. Janine pushing with conts, VX advancing FH134 MP90 |
15:09 |
FH127, conts 3-4:10. Head delivered. MP88 |
15:10 |
FH128. MP94 |
15:11 |
Normal birth live male infant: meconium liquor with delivery of body. Cord x3 tightly around neck and once around the body, quickly untangled. Cord clamped and cut. Pale, floppy, no respiratory effort. Baby passed to Sr Dunkley and taken to the resuscitaire. |
In the above table, the abbreviations used signify the following:
SRM = spontaneous rupture of membranes
VE = vaginal examination
PV = per vaginam
Conts = contractions
FH= fetal heart
B/S = blood-stained
MP = maternal pulse
VX = vertex (baby's head)
i) Full dilatation was diagnosed at 13:45. This denotes the start of the second stage of labour and from that time, a vaginal delivery was possible: delivery could have been assisted by vaginal operative means, using ventouse or forceps, if required.
ii) There is nothing in the notes to presage the birth of Jayden in his asphyxiated condition: going by the notes, the labour would appear to have progressed wholly normally and uneventfully until the actual birth.
iii) On the basis of the agreed evidence noted at paragraph 3(vi) above, the recordings of the fetal heart rate at 15:07, 15:09 and 15:10 cannot have been accurate as this was during the period of APH when the fetal heart rate would in fact have been severely bradycardic. This was acknowledged by the neonatologists (Dr Wardle and Dr Fox) in their joint statement dated 27 May 2023 where they state:
"We agree that the fetal heart recordings by the midwife in the final 5 to 10 minutes before birth are inconsistent with the fetal heart rates that would be expected during that period given the likely timings of the period of injury."
iv) Consistent with point (ii) above, the notes do not disclose that Midwife Kong, when she auscultated the fetal heart, heard any decelerations. In their joint statement, the expert obstetricians, Mr Ugwumadu and Professor Steer, were asked the question:
"Do you consider that in the second stage of labour CTG monitoring and/or correctly administered intermittent auscultation would have likely shown variable or complicated decelerations due to cord compression as labour progressed? If not, please explain your reasoning"
They responded:
"We agree that it is likely that CTG monitoring would have shown variable decelerations."
Professor Steer adds:
"By definition, with such decelerations the heart rate is sometimes in the normal range and sometimes slow (below 110bpm). It is possible that by chance the auscultated rates were all when the FHR was in the normal range. While this would be uncommon, there is no fundamental impossibility that by chance this was what happened."
Auscultation of the fetal heart was noted by Midwife Kong to have been carried out using the "Doptone" (also called the "Sonicaid"). The obstetricians did not answer the question in relation to "correctly administered intermittent auscultation" but Mr Ugwumadu did address this in his oral evidence: see paragraphs 14 and 35 below. However, it is a further feature of the notes that, despite the obstetricians' agreement that there would have been variable decelerations in the second stage of labour (ie from 13:45), they were never detected – or at least noted as having been detected.
Jayden's Treatment
"Baby taken to resuscitaire, dried and stimulated. Pale, floppy, HR equal/under 40bpm. No resp effort. X5 initiate breaths given & emergency buzzer pulled by C Kong. Neonatal team called on 2222 by St/M K Hudson + S/M A Doherty. No chest movement. Airway inspected under direct vision with laryngoscope Meconium + in airway, suction with neonatal yonker sucker, guedal airway inserted."
The neonatal team arrived at 15:13 and took over the baby's resuscitation.
"Meconium noted on baby's skin. Cord around neck x3.
Airway taken over by myself.
Laryngoscopy performed. Meconium suctioned from between cords.
5 inflation breaths given with good effect.
HR > 100. Good chest wall movements. Pinked up (no sats available yet).
Ventilation breaths continued as baby remained floppy. No respiratory effort.
Decision made to intubate at 7 minutes of life. Patient intubated with size 3.5 ETT, secured at 9 mins to the lips. Passive cooling started.
Spontaneous irregular respirations noted at 10 minutes old, as he was breathing against the tube."
pH: Arterial 7.00/Venous 7.11;
Base excess: Arterial -13.4/Venous -12.3.
Jayden was transferred to the Neonatal Unit by transport incubator, admitted to the Unit at 15:40 and placed onto a ventilator. At about 00:30 on 23rd July 2012, Jayden was transferred to Burnley General Hospital for active cooling. Prior to transfer, passive cooling was commenced at 00:07. Active cooling commenced at 07:10 and continued for 72 hours.
Allegations of Negligence
13. Although there was an issue at trial as to whether Midwife Kong absented herself from Delivery Room 6 (Janene's room) for extended periods of time arising from the evidence of Jayden's mother, his father, Craig Astley and Craig's mother, Julie Tully, who were all present throughout the labour, this was not a pleaded breach of duty and was not relied upon by Mr Allen KC in his written opening for the trial. Whilst I shall deal with this matter briefly in paragraph 47 below, it is arguably peripheral to the important causative breaches of duty pleaded and pursued.
"There are three main elements of the Claimant's case. They relate to events during his mother's labour on 22nd July 2012. They are:
1. Failing to pay adequate attention to the fact that Miss Burnett was passing blood-stained liquor, failing to commence CTG monitoring and failing to request medical review from about 12:45 onwards.
2. Failing to accurately monitor the Claimant's heart rate.
3. Failing to identify the Claimant's bradycardia/fetal heart rate abnormality from about 14:55 onwards."
Clearly, allegations 2 and 3 belong together. Given the agreement of the expert neonatologists that the APH and bradycardia started at about 15:03, that is the time from when there was a failure to identify the bradycardia, rather than 14:55. However, in his evidence, Mr Ugwumadu stated that, in his opinion, the variable decelerations which he had agreed with Professor Steer would have been present from 13:45 would have been complicated (or "complex") variable decelerations from 14:45. When Professor Steer was called, he did not disagree with this opinion which I therefore take to have been agreed: after Mr Ugwumadu finished giving his evidence in chief, Ms Pritchard KC was given time to take instructions from Professor Steer, she did not then challenge that opinion, and when Professor Steer gave evidence, he was not asked about it. The consequence of there being complex variable decelerations is that Mr Ugwumadu said he would have expected these to have been picked up by Intermittent Auscultation. Allegation 3 could therefore be refined as follows:
"3a Failing to identify the Claimant's fetal heart rate abnormality in the form of complex variable decelerations from about 14:45 onwards;
3b Failing to identify the Claimant's bradycardia from about 15:03 onwards."
These are both aspects of allegation 2, the failure accurately to monitor the Claimant's heart rate, and, in my judgment, the above refinement to allegation 3 can therefore be made without injustice to the Defendant who, at trial, had every opportunity to deal with it through their experts.
The Evidence of Midwife Kong
"In this case my recordings on the partogram show that the maternal pulse rate and the fetal heart rate were very different and I'm sure that I was not listening to the maternal pulse rather than the fetal heart in error."
"min B/S liquor PV. B/S show"
She said she would not use that terminology for fresh bleeding. A minimal amount of blood-stained liquor in established labour is not unusual and arises as a result of changes in the cervix commonly termed a "show". This differs from fresh bleeding and is not something of concern. She said that at no point did she have concerns about fresh bleeding such as to require continuous CTG monitoring. If she had had any concerns, she would have requested an obstetric review and commenced CTG monitoring. By 14:40 the contractions were strong and expulsive and the mother was pushing well, getting closer to delivery. At 14:45 the vertex was "just visible" as the baby advanced. She continued with her monitoring and at 15:05 she summoned assistance from a second midwife and Sr Dunkley attended at 15:07. The baby's head was delivered at 15:09 and the body was delivered at 15:11. She stated:
"I was very surprised by the condition of the baby at birth. He was pale and floppy and made no respiratory effort. The umbilical cord was wrapped three times tightly around the baby's neck and once around his body. I quickly untangled it and clamped and cut the cord. I passed the baby to my colleague, Sr Dunkley, and she immediately took the baby to the resuscitaire."
"Parous women:
• Birth would be expected to take place within 2 hours of the start
of the active second stage in most women.
• A diagnosis of delay in the active second stage should be made
when it has lasted 1 hour and women should be referred to a
healthcare professional trained to undertake an operative vaginal birth if birth is not imminent."
She confirmed that in this case the mother was parous (ie she had had a previous child), that the active second stage started at 13:45 and that delivery was not imminent at 14:45 and she agreed that, within the guideline, she should have sought obstetric help at 14:45. She said from her experience, she knew that the baby would deliver.
The Evidence of Midwife Cook (previously Dunkley)
"Whilst preparing the room I would have heard the fetal heart (via the Sonicaid when being taken by Midwife Kong) and would have commented if I had any concerns about what I could hear. The Sonicaid is at a volume that enables parents to hear the fetal heart, so it would not be difficult for me to have heard it too. After many years of experience, I am confident that I can intuitively recognise a concerning heart rate, for example one that is excessively low or high. If that is ever the case, I immediately raise it with the other midwife and either ask them to repeat the reading or suggest that CTG monitoring is commenced. Had any such concerns been noted or raised by me in this case these would have been noted in the medical records. I see that the records do not contain any note to indicate that I raised concerns about the fetal heart, which suggests that when I heard the same via the Sonicaid it was not concerning. The checking of the fetal heart (having heard the Sonicaid) and advice from supporting midwife is standard practice. If I'm ever asked to re-check a fetal heart (or I suggest to a colleague that they re-check) then that would be done without question. The re-checking and raising concerns would also be noted in the medical records at the time."
… Both midwives in the room would be able to hear the fetal heart rate via Sonicaid and had I thought that the fetal heart rate was concerningly low (or that the heart valves sounds were confusing the reading) I would have raised this with Midwife Kong immediately and requested that the reading be checked/repeated. I would also have noted those concerns in the medical records."
She said that it is not unusual for a baby to be born in an unexpectedly poor condition.
The Expert Midwifery Evidence
"Without CTG monitoring, you cannot gain full assurance of no concerns with the fetal heart rate alongside a concerning feature (blood-stained liquor). I would have expected the CTG to have remained in situ until there was no longer evidence of blood-stained liquor and an otherwise normal CTG"
"It is for the court to determine whether the fetal heart rate readings recorded prior to delivery were accurate. However, given the baby's condition at delivery, the fetal heart recordings made by midwife Kong in the period leading up to delivery are unlikely to be accurate"
Ms Moody confirmed that recognition of a fetal bradycardia would trigger using the emergency call bell and she would expect obstetric support to arrive within 2 minutes. If the baby was deliverable in the labour room then support by the midwife to allow the obstetrician to expedite delivery urgently would be required.
"In my opinion the observation of new onset blood loss at 7–8cm cervical dilatation and beyond is more consistent with antepartum haemorrhage/abruption than "show" and should have prompted continuous CTG monitoring. "Show" is characteristically mucoid and seen in the latent and early stages of labour, not usually at 7–8cm cervical dilatation or in association with the amniotic fluid. Furthermore, the absence of blood loss up to 12.00 makes "show" a less likely explanation of the bleeding."
She endorsed this comment from a midwifery standpoint, saying that it sounded reasonable to her.
i) First, when she gave her opinion and conclusions in Part Four of her report and addressed the allegations, she responded to the allegations in the Letter of Claim rather than the allegations in the Particulars of Claim. This meant that she was addressing some allegations which were no longer pursued and other allegations which had been refined.
ii) Secondly, and of greater concern, she failed to address adequately what was clearly the most important feature of the Claimant's case, namely the inconsistency between the fetal heart rate recordings from 15:05 and the agreed paediatric evidence that, during this period, the baby would have been severely bradycardic. In her report, Ms Crocker-Eakins quoted the allegation in the Letter of Claim which had stated:
"The Defendant failed in any event to appropriately perform intermittent auscultation of fetal heat rate from 08:30 hours to delivery at 15:11 hours to an acceptable standard. The Claimant will rely upon the recorded fetal heart rate obtained at intermittent auscultation during delivery, and specifically, the record at 15:10 hours which states that fetal heart rate was 128 bpm. It is the Claimant's case that the auscultation was negligently performed on the basis of fetal heart rate on delivery at 15:11 hours (1 minute later) being recorded at 40 bpm and recovery heart rate being less than 100 bpm for a number of minutes."
As already observed in Particulars of Claim, the allegation had been refined to:
"From about 14:55 onwards (1) failing to identify that the Claimant was suffering from a bradycardia."
In her report, Ms Crocker-Eakins responded:
"From the records, the fetal heart rate auscultation was in accordance with a reasonable and responsible body of midwives. None of the recordings represented a bradycardia … If the Court were to favour the Defendant's case from the care documented in the records, then the care was in accordance with a reasonable and responsible body of midwives. If the Court were to favour the Claimant's position, that the fetal heart was not auscultated every five minutes during the second stage of labour, as Midwife Kong was absent for periods of time greater than five minutes, as suggested by the Claimant's parents in their witness statements, then the care was below the standard of any reasonable and responsible body of midwives."
The difficulty with this is that, by the time of her report, Ms Crocker-Eakins had the report of Dr Grenville Fox where he had said that the FHR recordings by the midwife in the final 5-15 minutes before birth were inconsistent with the onset of the APH. That difficulty was compounded when she gave her evidence by the fact that, by this time, she had the agreed neonatology evidence that the FHR would have been bradycardic from 15:03 hours. I found it frankly astonishing that, in view of this, Ms Crocker-Eakins should have glibly stated that she stood by her report and nothing in the evidence changed that.
"The FHR recordings by the midwife in the final 5-15 minutes before birth are inconsistent with the timings above and I defer to expert obstetrics and midwifery opinion regarding the likely accuracy of the documented intrapartum FHR measurements."
Ms Crocker-Eakins confirmed that she had seen and read the report of Dr Fox at the time she wrote her report and that it had been an error on her part not to have considered the inconsistency between the fetal heart recordings and the baby's condition as highlighted by the neonatologists. She said:
"I agree I haven't addressed a central plank of the claimant's case. I believed until pointed out by you [ie Mr Allen] now that it was in my report: I last read my report last night."
This part of her evidence was, I am afraid, embarrassing. She deferred to the neonatologists and obstetricians as to the likely fetal heart rate over the period of APH and as to the likely fetal heart pattern in labour and she accepted that there would likely have been variable decelerations. She agreed with the comment of Professor Steer at paragraph 19 of the obstetric joint report – see point (iv) paragraph 8 above.
The Obstetric Evidence
"Jayden's injury on MRI is attributable to acute profound asphyxia only. Therefore, in my opinion based on the balance of probabilities, it is likely that cord compression occurred in the second stage of labour leading to FHR collapse, probably related to the cord round his neck and body and changes in Janene's birthing positions. It is my further opinion that an FHR bradycardia of sufficient duration and severity to cause Jayden's condition at birth ought to have been detected by a competently conducted IA."
At the time he wrote his report, Mr Ugwumadu had available to him Dr Stoodley's neuroradiology opinion which was to the effect that Jayden suffered APH for about 15-20 minutes, suggesting onset of FHR bradycardia at about 14:55. At that time he did not have the joint neonatology report modifying this time to 15:03. Mr Ugwumadu stated:
"If CTG monitoring had been in place or the IA conducted competently it would have been possible to deliver the baby with episiotomy within 5 minutes of the onset of bradycardia since his head was already visible by 14.45, advancing with effort, the labour was efficient, and Janene was parous. If the midwife had summoned the doctor instead and prepared for instrumental vaginal delivery, and the doctor arrived within 2 minutes, the doctor would have delivered the baby with episiotomy within 2 – 3 minutes or 'lifted the baby out' with a vacuum device, also within 2 -3 minutes."
Mr Ugwumadu was critical of Midwife Kong's conduct of intermittent auscultation. He said:
"The recommended procedure for conducting IA is to listen to the FHR for 60 seconds after a contraction to detect late or complicated variable decelerations, which are associated with fetal acidosis. It is highly unlikely that the IA was carried out correctly as recommended. It is inconceivable that the Claimant's FHR was 134bpm at 15:00, 132bpm at 15:05, 134 at 15:07, 127bpm at 15:09, 128bpm at 15:10 (Table 1), and he was delivered the very next minute with heart rate <40bpm for >5 minutes, in the absence of severe pneumonia, meconium aspiration syndrome, or congenital airway abnormality. It is a matter for the court and there was a second midwife in the room from 15:07, however, it is not credible that the FHR and MHR were counted for a full minute, and documented every other minute, whilst simultaneously assisting and managing a mother in active second stage of labour."
These criticisms hold good with an agreed onset of bradycardia at 15:03 rather than 14:55.
"Blood-stained liquor", "fresh bleeding", and "a bloody show" may look different to different observers depending on the relative amounts of blood, amniotic fluid, and/or mucus plug involved. Given that this was recurrent and reported as different things in late labour for 2 – 3 hours it qualifies for continuous electronic fetal heart monitoring in my opinion."
Ms Pritchard asked Mr Ugwumadu what he meant by the words "it qualifies for" and he said that his assessment was that it made more sense for the midwife to err on the side of caution and assume the worst and therefore move to CTG. He agreed that fresh blood loss looks different and he did comment that it depends on the amount of liquor and he was influenced by the fact that the amount of liquor was minimal. He agreed his opinion was not based on any guidelines saying he considered it to be common-sense. Janene had been monitored for 2-3 hours, blood loss had been noted and in his opinion this should have raised concerns, particularly when it was still being shown after full dilatation which is not what he would expect in a normal delivery. He agreed that it is not uncommon for there to be blood-stained show. He maintained that the fact that his view was not reflected in the guidelines did not make his view unimportant. He said: "I would have expected extra consideration to be given from the number of times blood staining was mentioned and the fact that it continued in the second stage. It seemed a long time to me." He said that if, as Midwife Kong, had said in her evidence, it was "pinkish with streaks of blood" and had been a one-off finding, his view would change, but not when this was over a 2-3 hour period. He said he believed that should have triggered CTG in a case like this. He agreed this is not covered in the local guidelines for his own hospital at St George's.
"The assertion that there was a fetal bradycardia present is purely conjectural and has no obvious evidential base"
In relation to the allegations surrounding the blood staining, he stated that he concluded that the blood staining of the amniotic fluid was minor, did not represent "fresh bleeding" and was regarded by the birth attendants (appropriately) as being associated with rapid cervical dilatation and the passage of a show and therefore not of any sinister significance and that their decision that there was no need for any further evaluation or acute intervention was supported by the literature. Asked to comment on the allegation in the Particulars of Claim that there been a failure to identify that the claimant was suffering from a bradycardia, he responded:
"The allegation of a bradycardia is not substantiated by the clinical records made at the time."
In relation to the allegation in the Particulars of Causation that CTG monitoring would have identified any significant fetal heart abnormality, he stated:
"If CTG monitoring had been in place, given Jayden's condition of birth and the fact that the umbilical cord was wrapped three times around his neck, I would have expected to see variable decelerations in the fetal heart rate produced by umbilical cord compression prior to the birth. They would likely have appeared as the baby's head descended through the birth canal, some time before the actual birth itself. The timing of the appearance of the decelerations would depend on the rapidity of head descent; one would not expect to see them until the umbilical cord was compressed or tightened as the head descended. This could have been as little as 10 min before the birth, or possibly up to an hour prior to the birth. As there was no indication for CTG monitoring, and therefore it was not performed, it is not possible to know when the variable decelerations would have appeared. Interference with blood flow between the baby on the placenta is unlikely to have occurred until the umbilical cord was compressed or tightened"
Discussion and Findings
Breach of Duty
i) The APH started at 15:03;
ii) From 15:03 there was a profound bradycardia;
iii) The recordings of the fetal heart rate by Midwife Kong cannot be accurate: this encompasses the purported readings at 15:05, 15:07, 15:09 and 15:10;
iv) There is no explanation as to how those readings could have been recorded if Midwife Kong was carrying out competent intermittent auscultation;
v) Midwife Kong therefore failed to identify the bradycardia over a period of 8 minutes.
Mr Allen KC postulated two possible explanations: first, that there was a fundamental failure in Midwife Kong's technique for carrying out intermittent auscultation, despite this being basic midwifery practice and despite Midwife Kong being a very experienced midwife; secondly she didn't in fact carry out the intermittent auscultation that she claims to have carried out. He submitted that the difficulty with the first explanation arises from the evidence of Midwife Cook who stated that if she had detected a low heart rate when she was in the room, she would have raised it with Midwife Kong and would have documented it. He submitted that the absence of any documentation of such concerns leads inevitably to the conclusion that the intermittent auscultation wasn't carried out at all.
"I see that the records do not contain any note to indicate that I raised concerns about the fetal heart, which suggests that when I heard the same via the Sonicaid it was not concerning."
It would, or should, surely have been just as concerning for Sr Cook not to have heard any heart rate at all because no intermittent auscultation was being carried out as to have heard a bradycardia.
Causation