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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Pullen v Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2015] EWHC 3134 (QB) (05 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/3134.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3134 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High court)
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JENNIFER ANN PULLEN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BASILDON AND THURROCK UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Defendant |
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Angus Piper (instructed by Bevan Brittan, Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 19 & 20 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Graham Wood QC :
Introduction
Background and evidence
Summary of procedure
Post surgery events
"pt (patient) lying in bed. Consent (. Wants to get onto commode. Hand out (indecipherable) exs (exercises) shown and given. Pt came to SOEOB (sit on the edge of the bed) and asked AX (asked) patient STS (?) to RTF (Roller frame). T/F to commode. Pt mob 15 m with RF. Pt made to sit in the chair. Pt c/o (complained of) pain ? (increasing) and concerned about it. N/S (nursing staff) informed about a patient's pain and her concerns. Mob well (mobilise or mobilised well)."
The expert evidence
"On the balance of probabilities what was the cause of the Claimant's left hip dislocation on 1st August 2009 ? "
Three alternatives were postulated, either a loose acetabular component, an acetabular cup that had been placed in an excessively open and anteverted position on 31st July, or another cause.
"... we both agree that on the balance of probabilities that the cause was a loose acetabular component."
In other words, Mr Bamford was now accepting that the hip dislocation was preceded by the movement of the acetabular cup.
"On the balance of probabilities would the cup have moved and/or the left hip dislocated on 1st August if the acetabular component had been placed in an acceptable position and/or a secure and competent press fit had been achieved intraoperatively on 31st July 2009?"
"We agree that it is unlikely that the cup had been placed in a position that was excessively open and anteverted on 31st July 2009. We agree on the balance of probabilities that the cup would not have moved had a secure press fit been achieved intraoperatively as the cup would not have become loose."
"Was an acceptable and competent pressfit secured?"
The answer was seemingly unequivocal in these terms:
"We agree that on the balance of probabilities an acceptable and competent press fit was not secured intraoperatively on 31st July 2009."
"In the joint statement, I have considered the response that, on the balance of probabilities, the hip dislocated due to the loose acetabular component. Although this remains a possibility, it should be stated that the hip could have dislocated for other reasons such as soft tissue impingement (particularly bearing in mind the patient's BMI) a haematoma, and abnormal movement of the leg. There is no evidence to support one potential cause over another, and they should be regarded as equally possible."
In other words he was now resiling from the position that it was more likely than not (the legal standard of proof) that a loose acetabular cup had caused the dislocation.
"As stated in my report, it is very possible that a reasonable press fit was obtained at surgery, but on dislocation of the hip the following day, the force applied to the rim of the cup as the hip came out of joint would be enough to cause loosening and hence movement of the cup."
I confess that I find it difficult to identify this precise reasoning in his early report.
"It is not my opinion that (earlier paragraph 7) implies that Mr Hearth was acting incompetently and there is evidence that he tested the fixation in the usual manner. As I have stated in previous reports, this is very subjective and the surgeon is not trying to test to destruction the fixation of the cup. Being an experienced surgeon I would expect Mr Hearth to have developed a feel for how hard to test the fixation. This, on rare occasions can be misleading so that cups that are felt to be solidly fixed initially subsequently become loose when an even greater force is applied across them, often when doing trial reductions particularly with large heavy legs. Even greater forces are applied by the patient when they get out of beds or chairs."
(In the course of his evidence to the court, Mr Bamford explained that he was there referring to the dislocation of the hip being the greater force.)
To what extent were these additional comments qualified or expanded in the oral evidence of the expert witnesses in court?
Definition of issues
"Was the acetabular cup adequately fixed in the hip replacement procedure, or might it have become loose because of a subsequent event of hip displacement?
If it was not adequately fixed, does this constitute a falling below acceptable standards on the part of the operating surgeon?"
There are brief and discreet factual issues arising from the evidence of Mrs Pullen which may have a bearing on the conclusions I reach in respect of the substantive issues.
Findings and Discussion
"….Where there is a clear conflict of medical opinion, the court's duty is not merely to say which view it prefers, but to explain why it prefers one to the other. This, in my judgment, is all the more so when the expert's view it prefers accepts a substantial element of what the less favoured expert describes as basic good practice ... it is not sufficient, in my view, simply to say that Mr Monaghan is representative of a responsible body of medical opinion and as a consequence (the Defendant surgeon) was not negligent"
Conclusion