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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> McDonald, R (on the application of) v Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea [2011] UKSC 33 (6 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2011/33.html Cite as: [2011] UKSC 33, [2011] PTSR 1266, (2011) 121 BMLR 164, (2011) 14 CCL Rep 341, [2011] HRLR 36, [2011] 4 All ER 881 |
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Trinity Term
[2011] UKSC 33
On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 1109
JUDGMENT
R (on the application of McDonald) (Appellant) v Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea (Respondent)
before
Lord Walker
Lady Hale
Lord Brown
Lord Kerr
Lord Dyson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
6 July 2011
Heard on 4 and 5 April 2011
Appellant Stephen Cragg Stephen Broach (Instructed by Disability Law Service) |
Respondent Kelvin Rutledge Sian Davies (Instructed by Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Legal Services) |
|
Intervener (Age UK) Ian Wise QC (Instructed by Irwin Mitchell LLP) |
LORD BROWN
Introduction
The history of the proceedings
The issues before this Court
(1) Was the Court of Appeal correct to hold that the 2009 and 2010 Care Plan Reviews are to be read as including a reassessment of the appellant's community care needs?
(2) Did the respondents' decision to provide pads interfere with the appellant's article 8 rights and, if so, was such an interference justified and proportionate?
(3) Were the respondents operating any relevant policy or practice for the purposes of section 21E(1) of the DDA 1995 and, if so, was this policy justified as a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim, namely the equitable allocation of limited care resources?
(4) Have the respondents failed to have due regard to the needs specified in section 49A of the DDA 1995 ("the general disability equality duty") when carrying out their functions in this case? (The appellant needs the court's leave to raise this issue, permission to invoke section 49A having been refused by a single Lady Justice before the Court of Appeal hearing and not sought afresh from that court.)
Issue One the 2009/2010 Care Plan Reviews
"(1) . . . where it appears to a local authority that any person for whom they may provide or arrange for the provision of community care services may be in need of any such services, the authority
(a) shall carry out an assessment of his needs for those services; and
(b) having regard to the results of that assessment, shall then decide whether his needs call for the provision by them of any such services. . . .
"(4) The Secretary of State may give directions as to the manner in which an assessment under this section is to be carried out or the form it is to take but, subject to any such directions . . ., it shall be carried out in such manner and take such form as the local authority consider appropriate."
"2(2) The local authority must consult the person, consider whether the person has any carers and, where they think it appropriate, consult those carers.
2(3) The local authority must take all reasonable steps to reach agreement with the person and, where they think it appropriate, any carers of that person, on the community care services which they are considering providing to him to meet his needs."
"Toileting/Substantial Risk: Ms McDonald has been diagnosed with having a neurogenetic bladder, which makes [her] want to go to the toilet more frequently. Ms McDonald needs assistance to access the toilet during the day, and if she uses it at night. Ms McDonald and the carers confirm that she needs to go to the toilet two to three times during the night. . . . no issues were raised about the need to open her bowels at night. Ms McDonald did not want to discuss the option of using incontinence pads or Kylie sheets as a way of meeting her toileting needs. Ms McDonald said that she is not incontinent and has repeatedly said that she is opposed to wearing a pad to meet her toileting needs. Ms McDonald became angry and upset when discussing this. As Ms McDonald has not consented to a referral to the Continence Service, it has not been possible to fully explore how all of her needs can best be managed. . . .
Conclusion: Ms McDonald continues to live safely at home. There have been no hospital admissions since she was discharged in early 2007. Ms McDonald has chosen not to take up the offer of assistive technology to help monitor her safety, has declined the offer of moving to one of the borough's extra care sheltered housing schemes and she has to date refused to consider incontinence pads as a means to manage risk when she cannot safely get to the commode unaided. . . . it remains social services' view that the use of incontinence pads is a practical and appropriate solution to Ms McDonald's night-time toileting needs. . . .
I remain of the opinion that Ms McDonald's need to be kept safe from falling and injuring herself can be met by the provision of equipment (pads and/or absorbent sheets). She has, however, consistently refused this option, refusing even to try the pads or to discuss the absorbent sheet option. I am aware that she considers pads and/or sheets to be an affront to her dignity. Other service users in my experience have held similar views when such measures were initially suggested but once they have tried them, and been provided with support in using them, they have realised that the pads/sheets improve quality of life by protecting them from harm and allowing a degree of privacy and independence in circumstances which, as a result of health problems, are less than ideal. The practicalities can be managed within the existing care package to accommodate Ms McDonald's preferred bedtime and to allow her to be bathed in the morning and/or have sheets changed. If Ms McDonald were willing to try this option, she might similarly alter her views."
"53. In my judgment, the 2009 and 2010 reviews are to be read as including a reassessment of Ms McDonald's needs. It is irrelevant that there has been no further separate 'Needs Assessment' document. Such a document is not, it seems, necessary in the first place, because a care plan could incorporate a needs assessment; but in any event FACS itself contemplates that a care plan review will incorporate a review of assessed needs. As for the 2009 and 2010 reviews in this case, it is noticeable that they no longer assess Ms McDonald's needs as including assistance to access the commode at night, although they recognise that that is what Ms McDonald wants. On the contrary, they refer to Ms McDonald's night-time toileting needs in much more general terms (as the earlier needs assessments had at one time done). Thus they speak of 'need for support at night' and that the 'need should be managed through the use of incontinence pads'. They specifically consider that the elimination of the risk of injury is best achieved by avoiding a transfer to the commode, and that Ms McDonald's desire for independence and privacy is best accommodated by dispensing with a night-time carer. Ms McDonald needs assistance safely to access the toilet only if she uses it at night, but, with the use of pads there is no need for such use. The issue is whether pads should be used or not 'to meet her toileting needs'. The use of pads is 'a practical and appropriate solution to Ms McDonald's night-time toileting needs'. Ms McDonald did not want to discuss the use of pads 'as a way of meeting her toileting needs'. Her 'need to be kept safe from falling and injuring herself can be met by the provision of equipment".
Issue Two Article 8
"We find it hard to conceive . . . of a situation in which the predicament of an individual will be such that article 8 requires him to be provided with welfare support, where his predicament is not sufficiently severe to engage article 3. Article 8 may more readily be engaged where a family unit is involved. Where the welfare of children is at stake, article 8 may require the provision of welfare support in a manner which enables family life to continue." (Bernard was said to illustrate that.)
Issue Three Section 21 of the DDA 1995
"Treatment, or a failure to comply with a duty, is justified under this subsection if the acts of the public authority which give rise to the treatment or failure are a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim."
Issue Four Section 49A of the DDA 1995
"(1) Every public authority shall in carrying out its functions have due regard to
. . .
(c) the need to promote equality of opportunity between disabled persons and other persons;
(d) the need to take steps to take account of disabled persons' disabilities, even where that involves treating disabled persons more favourably than other persons; . . .".
As Dyson LJ held in an analogous context in R (Baker) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2008] EWCA Civ 141; [2008] LGR 239, "due regard" here means "appropriate in all the circumstances" see too in this regard R(Brown) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Equality and Human Rights Commission intervening) [2008] EWHC 3158 (Admin); [2009] PTSR 1506. It is Mr Cragg's submission that, no express reference to section 49A being found in the respondent's documentation in this case, it is to be inferred that, in determining how to assess and meet the appellant's needs, they failed in their general duty under this section.
LORD WALKER
"The court should be aware that the solution of incontinence pads in a case of this nature is not exclusive to RBKC, nor did the suggestion that the claimant should wear them originate from social services, as my previous statement makes clear. In my experience the use of incontinence pads for patients who are not clinically incontinent is both widespread and accepted practice in the provision of social services.
Whilst RBKC accepts that the claimant is not clinically incontinent of urine, it is important to emphasise that her difficulty is that, due to impaired mobility, she cannot safely transfer from bed to a commode at night. In practical terms this presents substantially the same problems as a person who is incontinent. A person with this condition is often described as 'functionally incontinent'" . . .
Miss McDonald strongly differs from this view, and so may others. But I do not see how it could possibly be regarded as irrational.
"It is my experience based on 16 years in social care (most of them working with older people) and another four years working in a large general hospital that, in medical and residential care settings, it is general practice in the management of functional incontinence to use night-time incontinence pads or absorbent sheets as a means of enduring safety in patients/residents with severely compromised mobility. This management technique was suggested to the council by the claimant's GP Dr Parameshwaran on 19 September 2006 and also by the district nursing service, and the suggestion is consistent with my own knowledge of the care management of such persons.
The management plan would remain the same if the claimant needs to pass faeces at night, although good practice would be to encourage toileting last thing at night when her night-time carer visits and to encourage appropriate dietary changes. The need for morning bathing will arise whether or not faeces are passed at night and it is practical within the care package offered by the council. It should be noted that the need to pass faeces at night was not raised as an issue at the most recent review held in March 2010.
I am aware of guidance (DOH 2000) to the effect that incontinence pads should not be offered 'prematurely' in order to prevent dependence on them. I am also aware that aids and adaptations should be explored before such an option is considered. Unfortunately the claimant's situation is such that there is no equipment or adaptation which will enable her to access the toilet or commode without assistance. In any event any movement, even assisted, carries a risk to the claimant's safety. The primary care need of the claimant is to ensure her safety by protecting her from the risk of further falls, and I remain of the view that the use of night-time pads and/or absorbent sheets maximises the claimant's safety.
Having regard to the guidance and to the particular circumstances of the claimant as well as to the cost indications of the care options, I remain satisfied that the use of continence products is appropriate notwithstanding the claimant's objections. I note her concerns about privacy and dignity and about the need to maintain her relationship with her partner. It is the council's view that the use of continence products provides greater privacy and dignity than the presence of a carer assisting with personal and intimate functions at night-time."
Miss McDonald strongly differs from this view, and so may others. But I do not see how it could possibly be regarded as irrational.
LORD KERR
LORD DYSON
"It is clear from the facts stated above that the Royal Borough has taken great pains to consult both Ms McDonald and [her partner] about Ms McDonald's needs and their assessment and solution, and to seek agreement with Ms McDonald about such matters."
LADY HALE
"Where a local authority having functions under section 29 of the National Assistance Act 1948 are satisfied in the case of any person to whom that section applies who is ordinarily resident in their area that it is necessary in order to meet the needs of that person for that authority to make arrangements for all or any of the following matters, namely
(a) the provision of practical assistance for that person in his home; . . .
then, . . . , it shall be the duty of that authority to make those arrangements in exercise of their functions under the said section 29."