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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 >> Flanaghan v University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust [2019] EWHC 1898 (QB) (26 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1898.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1898 (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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Ann Margaret FLANAGHAN |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS PLYMOUTH NHS TRUST |
Defendant |
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Jeremy Hyam QC (instructed by Bevan Brittan Bristol) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 1, 2, 3 & 4 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ McKenna :
Introduction
Factual Background
"some degeneration of the lower part of your neck and the spinal cord at this level is being squashed. This is occurring at more than one level and is really being pinched quite severely….
In the meantime, I would strongly advise you not to do anything that may lead to any damage to your neck and to let me or your GP know if thinks become any worse as this may be an indication for you to come into hospital."
"I wonder if you would be able to see this woman with quite severe cervical cord compromise as soon as possible. She is 59 and diabetic. She gives a history of a gradual increasing spasticity down the left side of about a year's duration. She said that she was nagged into getting something done about her "funny walk by her husband. She complains of problems catching her foot and difficulty walking down hill. When seen in clinic she walked with circumduction on the left. There is no clear weakness down this side or much in the way of sensory symptoms but she does have spasticity. The plantar goes down. Her MRI shows compression of her cord in a most impressive manner at least 3 levels of the lower cervical region. It was impressive enough for the neurologists to send me an email drawing my attention to the result."
"The patient's husband works away for three months of an episodic fashion, he (husband) has reported that recently he has noted a slight gait abnormality (slight circumduction of left leg when walking) is a little worse.
From the patient's point of view however she is completely fit and normal with no pain, discomfort, sensory symptoms, weakness, sphincteric difficulties whatsoever. The patient reports that her 'minor waddle' only bothers her husband but does not bother her.
On further in depth questioning she does not have any symptoms whatsoever of cervical myelopathy or cervical radiculopathy.
Upon examination, the patient has normal sensation throughout. She is however hyper-reflexic from biceps jerks distally. The patient has bilateral positive Hoffmann's reflex. In her lower limbs there is slightly increased tone and there is four beats of ankle clonus on the left. Hyper-reflexia is present at the knee jerks and ankle jerks, plantar response however is interestingly downgoing.
MRI scan shows significant cervical disc disease at C4/5, 5/6 and 6/7. C4/5 is mainly right sided and causing foraminal stenosis and slight cord distortion but no cord compression. C5/6 disc lesion again on the right causing exit foraminal stenosis, cord distortion and certainly a degree of cord compressions. At C6/7 there is the significant lesion of a central disc lesion causing cord compression, which is associated with cord signal change.
Opinion/Plan – despite the rather striking appearance on MRI from the subjective point of view the patient is asymptomatic apart from needing a walk with slight circumduction on the left leg. Objectively there is hyper-reflexia with slightly increased tone in the lower limbs.
I have explained to the patient that the MRI appearances may have been there for many years, a MRI scan merely represents a snapshot in time. I have explained that whilst there is evidence of cord compression on the images as confirmed by the presence of hyper-reflexia upon examination from the symptomatic and functional point of view she is very well indeed.
I therefore think that the best way forward is to manage this case conservatively but I have carefully counselled the patient with regard to symptoms to look out for to necessitate her urgent re-referral. She will do this directly as I have given her my secretary's telephone number. These are obviously the symptoms of cervical radiculopathy and cervical myelopathy.
The patient has been made aware because of the cord compromise were she to suffer and incident such as falling down stairs or being involved in a car crash/whiplash injury she may be rendered paralysed whereas somebody without cord compression would not.
I am happy that the patient and husband are very intelligent, sensible people and I have left it to them to re-refer as and when rather than regular annual review in clinic."
Allegations of Breach of Duty
i) The failure by Mr Fewings when he saw the Claimant in 2008 either to recommend immediate decompression surgery at C4/5, C5/6 and C6/7 or to review the Claimant at least annually with repeat MRI scans every two years ("the 2008 allegations");
ii) the failure by Mr Sudhakar on 26 October 2012, wrongly operating without waiting for resolution of the swelling within the spinal cord caused by central cord contusion after the tripping accident;
iii) the failure by Mr Sudhakar on 26 October 2012, wrongly failing to order a pre-operative CT scan of the Claimant's neck so as to differentiate between bony osteophytes and soft tissue prolapse;
iv) the failure by Mr Sudhakar on 26 October 2012, wrongly attempting the cervical discectomy by using a drill and inserting Kerrison up-cut rongeurs despite the lack of sufficient space, especially at the C6/7 level, instead of performing anterior vertebrectomies at C5 and C6 when such a procedure would have improved access to the upper part of the C7 vertebral body and enabled him to drill away the upper part of the osteophyte by first getting below it;
v) the failure by Mr Sudhakar on October 26 2012, wrongly failing to appreciate the significance of the CSF leak and wrongly failing thereafter to convert to vertebrectomy; and
vi) the failure by Mr Sudhakar, failing to re-operate as soon as possible after the report of the MRI scan taken at 2351 hours on 26 October 2012 (collectively "the 2012 allegations").
The Law
"The test is the standard of the ordinary skilled man exercising and professing to have that special skill. A man need not possess the highest expert skill; it is well established law that it is sufficient if he exercises the ordinary skill of an ordinary competent man exercising that particular art."
"…he is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art. I do not think there is much difference in sense. It is just a different way of expressing the same thought. Putting it the other way round, a man is not negligent, if he is acting in accordance with such a practice, merely because there is a body of opinion who would take a contrary view."
"These decisions demonstrate that in cases of diagnosis and treatment there are cases where, despite a body of professional opinion sanctioning the defendant's conduct, the defendant can properly be held liable for negligence (I am not here considering questions of disclosure of risk). In my judgment that is because, in some cases, it cannot be demonstrated to the judge's satisfaction that the body of opinion relied upon is reasonable or responsible. In the vast majority of cases the fact that distinguished experts in the field are of a particular opinion will demonstrate the reasonableness of that opinion. In particular, where there are questions of assessment of the relative risks and benefits of adopting a particular medical practice, a reasonable view necessarily presupposes that the relative risks and benefits have been weighed by the experts in forming their opinions. But if, in a rare case, it can be demonstrated that the professional opinion is not capable of withstanding logical analysis, the judge is entitled to hold that the body of opinion is not reasonable or responsible.
I emphasise that in my view it will very seldom be right for a judge to reach the conclusion that views genuinely held by a competent medical expert are unreasonable. The assessment of medical risks and benefits is a matter of clinical judgment which a judge would not normally be able to make without expert evidence. As the quotation from Lord Scarman makes clear, it would be wrong to allow such assessment to deteriorate into seeking to persuade the judge to prefer one of two views both of which are capable of being logically supported. It is only where a judge can be satisfied that the body of expert opinion cannot be logically supported at all that such opinion will not provide the bench mark by reference to which the defendant's conduct falls to be assessed."
"25. In the present case I have received evidence from 4 experts, 2 on each side. It seems to me that in the light of the case law the following principles and considerations apply to the assessment of such expert evidence in a case such as the present:
i) Where a body of appropriate expert opinion considers that an act or omission alleged to be negligent is reasonable a Court will attach substantial weight to that opinion.
ii) This is so even if there is another body of appropriate opinion which condemns the same act or omission as negligent.
iii) The Court in making this assessment must not however delegate the task of deciding the issue to the expert. It is ultimately an issue that the Court, taking account of that expert evidence, must decide for itself.
iv) In making an assessment of whether to accept an expert's opinion the Court should take account of a variety of factors including (but not limited to): whether the evidence is tendered in good faith; whether the expert is 'responsible', 'competent' and/or 'respectable'; and whether the opinion is reasonable and logical.
v) Good faith: A sine qua non for treating an expert's opinion as valid and relevant is that it is tendered in good faith. However, the mere fact that one or more expert opinions are tendered in good faith is not per se sufficient for a conclusion that a defendant's conduct, endorsed by expert opinion tendered in good faith, necessarily accords with sound medical practice.
vi) Responsible/competent/respectable: In Bolitho Lord Brown Wilkinson cited each of these three adjectives as relevant to the exercise of assessment of an expert opinion. The judge appeared to treat these as relevant to whether the opinion was 'logical'. It seems to me that whilst they may be relevant to whether an opinion is 'logical' they may not be determinative of that issue. A highly responsible and competent expert of the highest degree of respectability may, nonetheless, proffer a conclusion that a Court does not accept, ultimately, as 'logical' . Nonetheless these are material considerations. In the course of my discussions with Counsel, both of whom are hugely experienced in matters of clinical negligence, I queried the sorts of matters that might fall within these headings. The following are illustrations which arose from that discussion. 'Competence' is a matter which flows from qualifications and experience. In the context of allegations of clinical negligence in an NHS setting particular weight may be accorded to an expert with a lengthy experience in the NHS. Such a person expressing an opinion about normal clinical conditions will be doing so with first hand knowledge of the environment that medical professionals work under within the NHS and with a broad range of experience of the issue in dispute. This does not mean to say that an expert with a lesser level of NHS experience necessarily lacks the same degree of competence; but I do accept that lengthy experience within the NHS is a matter of significance. By the same token an expert who retired 10 years ago and whose retirement is spent expressing expert opinions may turn out to be far removed from the fray and much more likely to form an opinion divorced from current practical reality. 'Respectability' is also a matter to be taken into account. Its absence might be a rare occurrence, but many judges and litigators have come across so called experts who can 'talk the talk' but who veer towards the eccentric or unacceptable end of the spectrum. Regrettably there are, in many fields of law, individuals who profess expertise but who, on true analysis, must be categorised as 'fringe'. A 'responsible' expert is one who does not adapt an extreme position, who will make the necessary concessions and who adheres to the spirit as well as the words of his professional declaration (see CPR35 and the PD and Protocol).
vii) Logic/reasonableness: By far and away the most important consideration is the logic of the expert opinion tendered. A Judge should not simply accept an expert opinion; it should be tested both against the other evidence tendered during the course of a trial, and, against its internal consistency. For example, a judge will consider whether the expert opinion accords with the inferences properly to be drawn from the Clinical Notes or the CTG. A judge will ask whether the expert has addressed all the relevant considerations which applied at the time of the alleged negligent act or omission. If there are manufacturer's or clinical guidelines, a Court will consider whether the expert has addressed these and placed the defendant's conduct in their context. There are 2 other points which arise in this case which I would mention. First, a matter of some importance is whether the expert opinion reflects the evidence that has emerged in the course of the trial. Far too often in cases of all sorts experts prepare their evidence in advance of trial making a variety of evidential assumptions and then fail or omit to address themselves to the question of whether these assumptions, and the inferences and opinions drawn therefrom, remain current at the time they come to tender their evidence in the trial. An expert's report will lack logic if, at the point in which it is tendered, it is out of date and not reflective of the evidence in the case as it has unfolded. Secondly, a further issue arising in the present case emerges from the trenchant criticisms that Mr Spencer QC, for the Claimant, made of the Defendant's two experts due to the incomplete and sometimes inaccurate nature of the summaries of the relevant facts (and in particular the Clinical Notes) that were contained within their reports. It seems to me that it is good practice for experts to ensure that when they are reciting critical matters, such as Clinical Notes, they do so with precision. These notes represent short documents (in the present case two sides only) but form the basis for an important part of the analytical task of the Court. If an expert is giving a précis then that should be expressly stated in the body of the opinion and, ideally, the Notes should be annexed and accurately cross-referred to by the expert. If, however, the account from within the body of the expert opinion is intended to constitute the bedrock for the subsequent opinion then accuracy is a virtue. Having said this, the task of the Court is to see beyond stylistic blemishes and to concentrate upon the pith and substance of the expert opinion and to then evaluate its content against the evidence as a whole and thereby to assess its logic. If on analysis of the report as a whole the opinion conveyed is from a person of real experience, exhibiting competence and respectability, and it is consistent with the surrounding evidence, and of course internally logical, this is an opinion which a judge should attach considerable weight to."
The Evidence
Neuroradiology: Dr Neil Stoodley for the Claimant and Dr Catriona Good for the Defendant
Neurosurgery: Mr Choksey for the Claimant and Mr Mannion for the Defendant
Neuroradiology
i) the 2008 MRI scan showed severe chronic degeneration with spinal cord compression, intrinsic cord signal change at C5/6 and C6/7 with multi-level chronic foraminal stenosis;
ii) between 2008 and 2012 there was subtle progression of the chronic degeneration and spinal cord compression;
iii) had an MRI scan been performed in (say) May 2012 it would have had similar appearances to the 23 October 2012 scan;
iv) following the first surgery on 26 October 2012, the post-operative scan shows residual cord compression from osteophytes, improved at C4/5 and C5/6 levels but unchanged at C6/7 level with persistent severe cord compression; and
v) a MRI scan taken on 19 August 2013 demonstrated that the surgery performed on 27 October 2012 provided adequate posterior decompression.
The 2008 Allegations
"She had a history of a stumbling gait. The absence of pain was irrelevant, because she did not have radiculopathic features at that time. The examination findings demonstrated features of pyramidal tract compromise. Her MRI scan showed signal change within the spinal cord, and very severe multi-level compression by disc/osteophyte complexes at C4/5, C5/6 and C6/7. She had critical spinal cord compression.
She should have been reviewed regularly. In keeping with the witness evidence from Mr and Mrs Flanaghan, it was important to 'watch her like a hawk'. In my opinion, she should be reviewed by a neurosurgeon at least annually, with an MRI scan every two years. The object would be to look for any evidence of clinical or radiological progression, and to counsel the patient repeatedly about the importance of prophylactic surgery in her particular case."
"In my opinion, the clinical and radiological features, taken together with what we know about the natural history, indicate that she had a significant and severe spastic myelopathy in 2008 and was at high risk of deterioration after a trivial injury. Such trivial injuries are relatively common. In my opinion, the counselling he [Mr Fewings] gave Mr and Mrs Flanaghan was simply wrong. From Mrs Flanaghan's own statement, it is clear that she left the consultation confused about the natural history, and how she was to avoid the possibility of further damage: particularly sudden deterioration. Either, she needed immediate decompressive surgery, or regular review."
"The contemporaneous records demonstrate a fair appraisal of the situation having been explained to the Claimant at the time, including the small risk of abrupt deterioration in the event of trauma. The risk of such a deterioration is very low and impossible to quantify, although I refer to a recent study from 2016 of patients with a similar condition to the Claimant, which showed an overall incidence of spinal cord injury of 0.2 per cent per year in patients with CSM (Chen et al., 2016)."
The 2012 Allegations
Discussion and Conclusions
i) wrongly placing the disc prosthesis too deep in the posterior vertebral body or wrongly failing to remove all of the osteophyte which was protruding so that it caused compression in the cord;
ii) following the MRI scan at 2350 hours on 26 October 2012, failing to return the Claimant at the operating theatre to remove the wrongly placed prosthesis or the osteophyte;
iii) on 27 October, wrongly taking the posterior approach since "an interior approach would have been correct for an interior cervical discectomy";
iv) during the operation on 27 October, failing to decompress the spinal cord at C6/7 by moving the disc prosthesis to an appropriate position or by removing compressing osteophyte;
none of which are now pursued.
"the selection of optimal surgical treatment for CSM especially for multi-level cervical spondylotic myelopathy remains controversial. ACDF may have a high risk of incomplete decompression limited visual exposure and risk injury to the cord. While ACCF (corpectomy) provides a more extensive decompression, it is a more difficult spinal surgery to perform, and has a higher incidence of complications such as injury to the spinal cord or nerve root, excessive bleeding, graft displacement or exclusion."
Disposal