Case Law[2025] ZASCA 36South Africa
SN obo ON v MEC for Health: Eastern Cape (277/2023) [2025] ZASCA 36 (2 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
2 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Delict - Medical negligence - failure to monitor the appellant and foetus during labour - whether hospital staff was negligent - whether negligence causally connected to the child’s brain damage - negligence and causation established.
Judgment
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## SN obo ON v MEC for Health: Eastern Cape (277/2023) [2025] ZASCA 36 (2 April 2025)
SN obo ON v MEC for Health: Eastern Cape (277/2023) [2025] ZASCA 36 (2 April 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
MEDICAL
NEGLIGENCE – Cerebral palsy –
Nuchal
cord around neck
–
Substandard
foetal heart rate monitoring – Proper monitoring would have
detected foetal distress caused by nuchal cord
– Would have
allowed timely intervention to prevent brain injury –
Hospital staff were negligent in failing to
monitor appellant and
foetus in accordance with established guidelines – Leading
to preventable injury – Negligence
causally linked to
child’s brain damage – Appeal upheld – MEC
ordered to pay agreed or proven damages.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 277/2023
In
the matter between:
SN
[…] obo ON
[…]
APPELLANT
and
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR
HEALTH: EASTERN CAPE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
SN obo ON v MEC for
Health: Eastern Cape
(Case no 277/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 36
(2 April 2025)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA ADP, WEINER, KATHREE-SETILOANE and KOEN
JJA and MOLITSOANE AJA
Heard
:
17 February 2025
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on Wednesday
the 2 April 2025.
Summary:
Delict -
Medical negligence - failure to monitor the appellant and foetus
during labour - whether hospital staff was negligent -
whether
negligence causally connected to the child’s brain damage -
negligence and causation established.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Mthatha (Nhlangulela DJP sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s agreed or proven
damages with costs’
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa ADP (Weiner,
Kathree-Setiloane and Koen JJA and Molitsoane AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appeal concerns a medical negligence claim in terms of which the
appellant (SN), acting on
behalf of her minor child (ON), claimed
damages in the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Mthatha (the
high court) arising
from the brain injury which ON suffered during
the birth process at Madzikane KaZulu Memorial Hospital (the
hospital) in the Eastern
Cape Province. The claim was lodged against
the Member of the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape Province
(the MEC), who
would be vicariously liable for damages caused by the
negligent conduct of the hospital staff.
The facts
[2]
During 2013, SN was pregnant with her first child. She was 34 years
old. She experienced labour
pains in the morning of 14 February 2013
and was taken to the hospital where she was admitted at around 07h30.
On examination in
the labour ward at 07h30, her pregnancy was
estimated at 36 out of 40 weeks and her uterine contractions were
normal. There are
two phases of labour: the latent phase progressing
to the active phase. The active phase in turn has two stages, with
the first
stage beginning when the cervix of a woman in labour
reaches a dilation of 4cm and the second stage starting when the
cervical
dilation is 10cm. The examination revealed further that SM
was in the latent phase of labour. The membrane had not yet ruptured.
She had a good temperature and pulse. The foetal heart rate (FHR) was
142
beats per minute (bpm)
. The foetus was
in a cephalic presentation and the cervix was 3cm dilated.
[3]
The partogram began at 10h00. The examination revealed that labour
was progressing well and the
maternal condition was good. The FHR was
stable at 138 bpm. SN was 4cm dilated and the membrane was intact
with no caput nor moulding.
A pethidine drug was administered to calm
down her labour pains. The Maternity Case Record (MCR) did not show
any further assessment
after 10h00. However, the partogram form
showed that SN was again assessed at 12h00, though Sister Bonga, the
nurse that attended
to SN, stated that it was between 11h30 and
12h00. I will return to this issue later in my judgment. At this
stage, the assessment
showed the FHR at 136 bpm; that there were no
decelerations; the liquor was broken and there was a tinge of
meconium although not
recorded whether thick or thin; the head of the
baby was down completely; 2 caput and no moulding.
[4]
The summary of labour form in the MCR showed that SN was fully
dilated at 11h15 and began bearing
down at 11h30. A male child was
born at 12h00. As regards complications, the summary of labour form
revealed that there was a cord
which was wrapped thrice around the
baby’s neck. It was not recorded whether the cord was tight or
loose. The neonatal detail
showed that a male child was born alive.
It is further recorded that his 1-minute Apgar score was 7/10.
[1]
His score for the heart rate was 2, while he scored 1 for
respiration, muscle tone and response to stimulation respectively. He
scored 2 for colour. A second Apgar assessment was done 5 minutes
after ON’s birth; he scored 8/10, again the score for heart
rate was 2. There was no improvement on his respiration and muscle
tone. His response to stimulation had improved and scored 2.
The
neonatal assessment described ON as a ‘floppy baby’ with
a weak Moro reflex,
[2]
and an
absent ‘cry’. He had to be resuscitated.
[5]
Later observations noted that ON was resuscitated with an oxygen
mask. The first examination on
the neonatal page was completed at
12h30. It recorded that ON was lethargic, hypotonic, tachypnoeic with
costal recession and his
cry was absent. The nursing notes recorded
ON as being critically ill, cyanosed and requiring supplementary
oxygen, nostalgic feeding
and head cooling. ON was diagnosed with a
hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE).
[3]
Ischaemia is defined as a deficiency of blood in a body part due to
functional construction or actual obstruction of a blood vessel.
Hypoxia results from a sustained reduction in the supply of oxygen to
the brain.
In
the high court
[6]
It was on that basis that the appellant claimed damages from the MEC.
In her particulars of claim,
SN asserted, inter alia, that the MEC’s
employees, ie hospital staff, had failed to initiate regular blood
sugar or blood
pressure monitoring of SN after she was admitted at
the hospital; failed to take required steps to ensure proper, timeous
and professional
assessment, monitoring and management of SN, and
failed to take steps to prevent the occurrence of complications when
this could
have been done by exercising reasonable care and
diligence. Furthermore, it was averred, inter alia, that the hospital
staff had
failed to perform accurate and proper monitoring of the
foetal heart rate; failed to record an accurate partogram; failed to
monitor
the FHR with sufficient frequency, and failed to detect that
ON was in foetal distress.
[7]
The MEC’s plea amounted to a bare denial, denying every aspect
of negligence which the appellant
had alleged in the particulars of
claim. She pleaded, in the alternative, that in the event that the
court finds that her nursing
staff’s monitoring of the labour
was substandard, then the baby’s brain damage was not caused by
such lack of monitoring,
but was the result of an acute profound
hypoxic ischemic injury caused by an unknown sentinel event. The
pre-trial minutes identified
the issues for determination as
negligence and causation and indicated that the parties agreed to
separate the issues of liability
and quantum. The trial commenced on
17 February 2020.
[8]
At the commencement of the trial, Counsel for the MEC in his opening
address referred to the formal
admissions that the MEC made in
respect of the joint minute of the obstetricians, Dr Ebrahim and Dr
Frank dated 29 August 2019.
Of relevance at this stage is the
admission in paragraphs 6 to 8 of the joint minute which reads:
‘
6.
The Department of Health’s guidelines for Maternity care in
South Africa (2007) state that the FHR should be checked at
half
hourly intervals in the first stage of labour, before during and
after a contraction. It is also a standard of care to check
the FHR
after every five minutes or after second push in the second stage of
labour.
7.
FHR monitoring was sub-standard as it was not checked in accordance
with these guidelines.
8.
It is therefore unknown whether FHR abnormalities were present or not
in the first and second stages of labour.’
In
effect, the MEC admitted that the hospital staff were negligent in
monitoring SN’s labour progress.
[9]
The evidence adduced before the high court was that of the appellant,
the nursing sister who attended
to her (Sister Bonga) and two
experts. Sister Bonga had no recollection of SN’s labour
process and the birth of ON. She testified
as to what is recorded in
the MCR and what her usual practice was in dealing with a patient in
labour. The expert witnesses who
testified formulated their opinions
based on the appellant’s medical records, her antenatal card,
the partogram, the neonatal
records as well as the MRI scan performed
by Dr Twetwa on 22 August 2014. The MRI features were considered by
the radiologists
as diagnostic of hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy.
[10]
The appellant testified and adduced the evidence of two experts,
namely Dr Ebrahim, an obstetrician and gynaecologist,
and Dr Kara, a
paediatrician. The MEC adduced the evidence of Sister Bonga. The
MEC’s gynaecologist and obstetrician, Dr
Frank, signed a joint
minute of experts with Dr Ebrahim, but did not testify during the
trial.
[11]
In its judgment, the high court outlined the issue for determination
as follows:
‘
[7]
As agreed in the pre-trial minute, and repeated during the trial on
18 February 2020, the following issues were identified by
the parties
as being critical for the determination of this matter. Those are:
(1) whether the acute profound hypoxic ischaemic
injury that occurred
intrapartum was preventable or foreseeable to the nursing staff of
the hospital (the negligence issue); and
(2) if so, whether the
conduct of the nursing staff was the cause of the cerebral palsy (the
causation issue).’
[12]
Having analysed the evidence of all the witnesses, the high court
found that the monitoring of the appellant
by Sister Bonga was not
substandard. The high court accepted Sister Bonga’s evidence
that the assessment and examination
of the appellant was done at the
correct intervals; the foetal heart rate was always normal, the
existence of Grade 1 meconium
was not an indication of foetal
distress, and Sister Bonga did not observe any warning sign which was
threatening to the well-being
of the foetus. The high court also
accepted Sister Bonga’s evidence that the cord that was wrapped
thrice around the baby’s
neck was not tight as she managed to
put her finger between the cord and his neck to clamp and cut the
cord. The evidence of Dr
Ebrahim was rejected by the court as being
extremely confusing and not fact based. The high court concluded that
‘the loose
nuchal cord did not cause acute profound hypoxic
ischaemic brain injury in this case’. Consequently, the
appellant’s
claims were dismissed with costs. This appeal is
with the leave of the high court.
In
this Court
Evaluation
of expert evidence
[13]
The legal principles applicable to the evaluation of expert evidence
was outlined by this Court in
AM
and another v MEC Health, Western Cape
,
[4]
as follows:
‘
.
. . The functions of an expert witness are threefold. First, where
they have themselves observed relevant facts that evidence
will be
evidence of fact and [be] admissible as such. Second, they provide
the court with abstract or general knowledge concerning
their
discipline that is necessary to enable the court to understand the
issue arising in litigation. This includes evidence of
the current
state of knowledge and generally accepted practice in the field in
question. Although such evidence can only be given
by an expert
qualified in the relevant field, it remains, at the end of the day,
essentially evidence of fact on which the court
will have to make
factual findings. It is necessary to enable the court to assess the
validity of opinions that they express. Third,
they give evidence
concerning their own inferences and opinions on the issues in the
case and the grounds for drawing those inferences
and expressing
those conclusions.’
[5]
[14]
That being so, this Court had earlier on in
Michael
and Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and Another
[6]
cautioned that courts should be slow to conclude that the views
genuinely held by competent expert are unreasonable. The Court
further warned that a court is not bound to absolve a defendant from
liability for allegedly negligent medical treatment or diagnosis
just
because expert opinion evidence is that treatment or diagnosis was in
accordance with sound medical practice.
[15]
Having stated the above. I turn to the claim itself. It is clear that
SN’s claim is based on the
Lex Aquilia
. The requirements
of
Lex Aquilia
are a wrongful act which caused injury or
damage.
Damage
[16]
As regards injury, it is common cause that ON suffered damage. He is
a cerebral palsy (CP) baby. This is
confirmed in the joint minute
report of both the obstetricians, Dr Ebrahim and Dr Frank and that of
the radiologists, Dr Kara and
Dr Lewis.
Causation
[17]
The question is what caused ON to be a CP baby. There is uncontested
evidence that there was a cord around
ON’s neck. This cord was
wrapped thrice around his neck. The MCR recorded the cord around the
neck as a complication. Dr
Ebrahim opined that ‘in the absence
of an observable sentinel event, the cord was clearly tightly around
the neonate’s
neck giving signs of near strangulation and WAS
the sentinel event.’ He concluded that the cord that was
wrapped around ON’s
neck was the more probable cause of the
injury as opposed to the cord compression. His reason was that ‘tight
nuchal cords
are more commonly associated with cerebral palsy as
opposed to a terminal bradycardia causing sentinel brain damage.’
[18]
The above obstetricians’ opinion was admitted by the MEC in her
formal admissions. The admission was
also confirmed by Counsel for
the MEC at the commencement of the trial. The admission that there
was an occlusion caused by the
cord was therefore not simply an
admission of the opinion of an expert or the joint opinion of
experts; it is free standing and
meant that causation was no longer
an issue in dispute. Therefore, it was a hypoxic ischaemic event (a
reduction or blockage of
blood flow to a specific area of the body,
leading to a shortage of oxygen and nutrients) that caused ON’s
injury.
[19]
This brings me to the next issue, namely negligence: whether the cord
occlusion could have been detected
and steps taken to avoid an
ischaemic hypoxic injury timeously.
Negligence
[20]
The test as for negligence, is trite,
[7]
it rests on two bases, namely, reasonable foreseeability and the
reasonable preventability of damage and failure to act accordingly.
What is or is not reasonably foreseeable in a particular case is a
fact-bound enquiry.
[8]
[21]
The standards that were applicable in clinics and district hospitals
in South Africa at the time of ON’s
birth were those specified
in the Guidelines for Maternity Care in South Africa 2007, which
emphasise the necessity to monitor
a woman in labour. They set out
the standard of monitoring that is considered appropriate. The
guidelines state that when the patient
is in the active phase of
labour ie when the cervix is 4cm dilated, the FHR should be checked
every half an hour - before, during
and after every contraction.
However, in this case, SN was assessed at 10h00 and there is no
record of any monitoring at 10h30
or 11h00, or when NS was fully
dilated at 11h15. There is only one period of monitoring recorded
which, on the mental recollection
of Sister Bonga, is alleged to have
been somewhere between 11h30 and 12h00.
[22]
Dr Ebrahim explained how the injury normally occurs: According to
him, the injury to the brain is caused
by an acute drop in oxygen
levels in the foetus. He went on to explain what happens in the
circulation of the foetus when it is
deprived of oxygen. During
labour, the foetus is naturally exposed to slight drops of oxygen
levels. But a healthy foetus is able
to handle that without any
changes in its heartbeat. However, when the oxygen levels of the
foetus drop to below 50 percent of
norm, it affects the
cardiovascular response of the foetus. What happens is that the
foetus’ heart rate slows down in the
face of this reduced
oxygen supply from the maternal circulation, and this is mainly a
defence mechanism for the heart to reduce
its oxygen consumption so
that the heart does not fail. The foetus slows down the heart, so it
works less and therefore consumes
less oxygen in the environment of
reduced oxygen. As a result, the heart does not function at its
normal rate above 110 bpm but
rather does so at a reduced level
because the normal level requires that it must use up more oxygen.
[23]
According to Dr Ebrahim, there is an additional mechanism in the
circulation that prevents the vital organs,
other than the heart,
from being compromised by the reduced oxygen output. This mechanism,
preferentially distributes whatever
oxygen there is to the vital
organs, that is, the brain, the kidneys, and the adrenal glands. The
initial response is a drop in
the heartbeat, which is called a
bradycardia. This bradycardia will last for the duration of the
contraction, because the contraction
is the cause of the reduced
oxygen - transient reduction in oxygen. And when the contraction is
over, the heartbeat returns to
normal, because it is again getting a
normal supply of oxygen. But, if a drop in oxygen does not recover,
the bradycardia will
remain because the heart is being deprived of
oxygen for a prolonged period of time. As a result of that prolonged
bradycardia,
the eventual supply of oxygen to the brain is also
compromised to the extent that the brain suffers acute damage.
[24]
The uncontested evidence of Dr Ebrahim was that the injury or the
hypoxic ischaemic episode would have manifested
itself in
decelerations of the FHR which would normally be noted with adequate
monitoring. He opined that foetal distress is unpredictable
and can
occur even in low-risk pregnancies. However, he was of the opinion
that FHR abnormalities are the first signs of such foetal
distress.
Therefore, FHR monitoring is a universal requirement in labour cases.
According to Dr Ebrahim, in the face of the foetal
distress, the
desired preventive action indicated in the maternity guidelines would
have been sufficient to expedite ON’s
delivery and would have
prevented his brain injury.
[25]
It is clear on the probabilities in this matter that the injury was
caused by the cord around the neck of
ON. Such injury, according to
Dr Ebrahim, could have been prevented by proper monitoring by the
nursing staff to determine whether
there were FHR decelerations.
There was however no monitoring at 10h30 up to 11h00. There was also
no monitoring at 11h15 when
SN was fully dilated, and none at 11h30
when SN started bearing down and the cord probably tightened. This
was a serious and critical
period to determine any deceleration in
the FHR, yet it is clear from Sister Bonga’s evidence that the
nursing staff did
not take reasonable and necessary steps to monitor
the FHR of ON. Sister Bonga’s evidence points to clear
substandard monitoring
that did not accord with the standards set out
in the guidelines. According to her evidence, the FHR was 138 bpm at
around 10h00
and 136 bpm somewhere around 11h30 and 12h00. On the
probabilities, that reading cannot be correct because shortly
thereafter ON
was born floppy and lethargic.
[26]
Of much concern in the evidence of Sister Bonga is that she recorded
in the MCR that the cord around the
neck was a complication yet she
did not indicate whether the cord was tight or loose. She did not
indicate whether the meconium,
which is indicative of foetal stress,
was thin or thick. She had no recollection of what happened to the
patient except for what
she recorded in the MCR and what she would
normally do in the circumstance. Curiously, she could recall that she
got her finger
under the cord and cut it yet this was never recorded
in any of the hospital records. How she remembered this, remains a
mystery.
[27]
In my view, Sister Bonga was not an honest and trustworthy witness.
Her evidence should have been rejected
as being unreliable and not
credible. On the contrary, I find the evidence of Dr Ebrahim to be
more probable as it is consistent
with the probabilities on the
evidence viewed as a whole. He gave evidence concerning his ‘own
inferences and opinions on
the issues in the case and the grounds for
drawing those inferences and expressing those conclusions.’
[9]
His conclusions were not unreasonably arrived at. They were based on
genuine views and logical reasoning.
[28]
In conclusion, nuchal cords wrapped around the neck of foetuses occur
frequently
[10]
but they do not
all result in CP births. Few do. This is because they are
generally, on probabilities, identified early enough
by proper or
standard monitoring, picking up the foetal distress shown by
decelerations or otherwise, and are then dealt with by
timeous
interventions. That is what a reasonable member of the nursing staff
would have done. The MEC’s employees failed
to do so.
[29]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The
defendant is ordered to pay the plaintiff’s agreed or proven
damages with costs’
F E Mokgohloa
Judge of Appeal
Appearances
For the appellant:
V Kunju SC
L Brauns
C Gqetywa
Instructed by:
Mjulelwa
Incorporated Attorneys, Mthatha
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For the respondent:
P J de Bruyn SC
T Rossi
Instructed by:
Norton Rose
Fulbright South Africa Inc, Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henney Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
APGAR stands for Appearances, Pulse, Grimace, Activity and
Respiration. In the Apgar test, five factors are used to check a
newborn baby’s health. Each is scored on a scale of 0 to 2,
with 2 being the best score. For Appearance the skin colour
is
checked; for pulse, heart rate; for Grimace, reflexes; for Activity,
muscle tone; and for Respiration, breathing rate and
effort. The
individual scores for the five factors are added up to obtain a
score out of ten. The highest score to be achieved
is 10 and scores
of 7, 8, or 9 out of 10 are normal or good scores. Source:
kidshealth.org.
[2]
The Moro reflex is an infantile reflex that, inter alia, entails the
infant’s spreading of the arms in response to a sudden
loss of
support. In W B Saunders Co’s
Dorland’s
Illustrated Medical Dictionary
25
ed (1974), Moro reflex is described as follows: ‘[O]n placing
an infant on a table and then forcibly striking the table
on either
side of the child, the arms are suddenly thrown out in an embrace
attitude; called also startle r[eflex]’. W
B Saunders Co’s
Dorland’s
Illustrated Medical Dictionary
25
ed (1974) defines ‘hypertonia’ as ‘increased
resistance of muscle to passive stretching’.
[3]
The American College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (ACOG) defines
neonatal encephalopathy as a clinically defined syndrome of
disturbed neurological function in the earliest days of life of an
infant born after 35 weeks of gestation manifest by a subnormal
level of consciousness or seizures and often accompanied by
difficulty with initiating and maintaining respiration and
depression
of tone and reflexes.
[4]
AM and
another v MEC Health, Western Cape
[2020]
ZASCA 89; 2021 (3) SA 337 (SCA)
[5]
Ibid
para 17
[6]
Michael
and Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2001] ZASCA 12
,
2001
(3) SA 1188
(SCA);
2002 1 All SA 384
(SCA) paras 36 and 39.
[7]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A);
[1966] 2 All SA 490
(A) at 430E-F
[8]
Pitzer
v Eskom
[2012]
ZASCA 44
; 2012 JDR 0507 (SCA) para 24.
[9]
Op
cit fn 4
[10]
Peesay, M ‘Nuchal Cord and Its Implications’ Maternal
Health, Neonatology, and Perinatology (2017).
sino noindex
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