Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 77South Africa
N[...] v MEC for the Department of Health, Gauteng Provincial Government (2017/30819) [2024] ZAGPJHC 77 (30 January 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 77
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## N[...] v MEC for the Department of Health, Gauteng Provincial Government (2017/30819) [2024] ZAGPJHC 77 (30 January 2024)
N[...] v MEC for the Department of Health, Gauteng Provincial Government (2017/30819) [2024] ZAGPJHC 77 (30 January 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_77.html
sino date 30 January 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2017/30819
1.
Reportable: Yes/No
2.
Of interest to other judges: Yes/No
3.
Revised: Yes/No
In
the matter between:
N[...] M[...] obo
N[...]
U[...] M[...] H[...]
A[...]
Plaintiff
and
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH,
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Mpofu, AJ
Background Facts
[1]
Mrs M[...] N[...], the natural guardian and mother of
U
(minor girl child)
born on 19 Febuary 2013, is suing
the Defendant
(herein referred to as MEC for the Department of
Health)
in order to recover damages allegedly suffered by the
child as a consequence of Kernicterus due to the untreated
presentation of
a high bilirubin level after her birth. The cause of
action is located in delict, amidst an allegation that the staff
working at
the hospitals and medical facility under the authority,
administration and control of the Department of Health meted out
substandard
care to U resulting in in the injuries she suffered.
[2]
The plaintiff was a G4P3 mother (
viz
she had three children
and was pregnant with the fourth). She had an uneventful
gestational period. She gave birth
to U who weighed in 3,490g
at birth, her Apgar scores were normal at 9/10 and 10/10 after birth.
Both mother and baby were
discharged in good health within six
hours, after a doctor had assessed them.
[3]
On 21 February 2013, the Plaintiff returned to the South
Rand
Hospital for a routine check-up, additionally due to the fact that
the baby was crying and unwell. They were both admitted
at
13:55 by Dr Graca who made a provisional diagnosis of neonatal
jaundice. It has been established through expert evidence that
70-80%
of all babies develop visible yellow discolouration of the skin/eyes
in the first week of life, this is normal (physiological),
the yellow
pigment (bilirubin) results from the breakdown of excessive red blood
cells after birth, hence the inability of the
new-born’s liver
to excrete the excessive load. Bilirubin is potentially toxic
to brain cells. Since the bilirubin
is bound to albumin in the blood,
if and when the binding sites on the albumin are exceeded, free
bilirubin can enter the brain
and cause permanent damage
viz
Kernicterus.
[4]
Dr Graca ordered double phototherapy for baby U on admission,
her
blood was drawn to ascertain the bilirubin level in her blood, i.e. a
total serum bilirubin. A decision was taken that
baby U would
be transferred to Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Academic Hospital
(CMJAH). At 15:00, while still in South Rand
District Hospital,
U was admitted to ward 12, whereby phototherapy was started, an
infusion was inserted, the baby was stable and
breastfeeding.
Phototherapy light works by changing the fat-soluble bilirubin
into water-soluble bilirubin to be excreted
by the patient.
Intensive phototherapy in the form of double lights is used worldwide
in the treatment of severe
neonatal hyper-bilirubinaemia.
[5]
At 17:45 the condition of the baby was recorded in the
hospital
records as “not well, crying and irritable”. The
intravenous infusion was in place. The serum bilirubin
level of
the baby was recorded as 517. Dr Graca requested that the baby be
kept “
NIL PER OS”
meaning that the baby not be
breast fed in preparation for a
blood exchange transfusion (BET)
which would need to be performed at CMJAH.
[6]
The Emergency Medical Services, (EMS) arrived at the
South Rand
Hospital at 23:00 to transfer the baby to CMJAH, a delay of 5 hours.
The admission records allude to an admission
at 23:33. Ultimately the
serum bilirubin
was checked at CMJAH and was found to have
slightly reduced from 517 to 482 which was still above the exchange
transfusion level.
The baby’s condition was described as
“awake, active and had a soft fontanelle”. Professor
Bolton, the Defendant’s
expert, testified that there is no
absolute level of bilirubin above which brain damage will be
inevitable, but that tables exist
which aid caregivers to decide on
appropriate management. He further testified that extremely high
levels of bilirubin at which
brain damage becomes more likely are at
about
425 UMOL/L
. In cases of marked raised levels, an
exchange transfusion is undertaken.
[7]
Professor Smith (the Plaintiff’s expert) stated
that when you
have a jaundiced baby, irritability should alert you that the effect
of bilirubin that is at play, and that the longer
you expose the baby
to high levels of bilirubin, you are putting it at risk. He
contended that the cerebral irritation at
17:45 was a missed
opportunity between
jaundice and encephalopathy
, this
according to him is supported by the crying U, according to the
mother. He went on to explain that irritability, excessive
crying, poor ability to suck and a raised temperature were some of
the symptoms for the
onset of encephalopathy
. He particularly
emphasises that encephalopathy can be subtle at onset but certain
symptoms and outcomes may be reversed by a BET
although at a
bilirubin of 517 the baby may have incurred a degree of injury. Prof
Smith further testified that the first transfusion
was delayed and
performed with blood which was haemolysed. He denied that it
was the baby’s reaction to the exchange,
stating that in his
career spanning over 30 years he had not seen this phenomenon that he
described as a health system’s
failure.
Emergency
Medical Services
[8]
After a diagnoses of jaundice by Dr Graca at the South
Rand District
Hospital and a decision was made at 13:00 on 21 February 2013 that
the child should be transferred to CMJAH for a
blood exchange
transfusion, there was an inordinate delay by the Emergency Medical
Services (i.e. ambulance services) to transfer
the baby to undergo
the procedure which could have reduced the permanent damage suffered
by baby U. There are unconfirmed reports
by the mother that around
18:00 she overheard Dr Graca over a speaker phone enquiring if the
ambulance had arrived to transfer
the baby, and that she would sue
the ambulance service should anything go wrong. This assertion was
denied by Dr Graca who
admitted that the child was quite yellow
hence she was admitted. She went on to say that she had to knock off
at 16:00 and that
is why, once Dr Modise became aware of the 517
raised level, he again logged a call to the EMS.
[9]
The clinical manager for South Rand, Dr Letoaba, was
not part of the
staff in 2013, he told the Court in his testimony that there is a
service level agreement signed on behalf of the
Department of Health
to the effect that the National Health Service is an authorised agent
of Gauteng. He explained that
EMS should ordinarily be
available within an hour when summoned to a rural area and thirty
minutes for urban areas. He was at pains
to explain that the EMS
system works on priority patients. He accepted that baby U was a
priority patient. It has not been disputed
that calls were made to
EMS at 20:30 and 21:45. Dr Letoaba admitted that there was indeed a
delay in waiting for EMS from 18:30
until 23:30.
[10]
The abovementioned sentiment was equally conveyed by Prof Bolton who,
in his own words,
stated as follows: “
that there was some
delay in the provision of an ambulance for the transfer of the
patient to CMJAH. It has been accepted
by all role players that
guidelines within Gauteng are that an ambulance should be available
urgently, plus that mother and baby
cases are a priority in medical
services. Here it took about five hours (5) to take a baby to a
hospital located twelve (12) kilometres
away”.
[11]
Matron Tasnim Loghat was an operational manager responsible to
maintain quality
and standards in the two paediatric wards of CMJAH.
She testified that baby U was admitted in ward 286 on 21
February 2013
and that she would have to be moved to ward 287 for the
blood exchange procedure and that, ideally ward 286 does not
accommodate
patients with medical conditions for example, patients
waiting for a kidney/liver transplant as opposed to oncology and
haematology
patients.
The
Actual Blood Exchange Transfusion
[12]
The actual procedure was performed by Dr Mammen, who in 2013 was a
registrar
(in the process of being trained to be a paediatrician
specialist). He was assisted by one Dr Hunt under the
supervision
of a qualified paediatrician, Dr Sheba Keresa Varughese,
in charge of the unit. Dr Varughese testified that she had been on
call,
according to her Dr Nadia was a registrar on the night of
21 Feb 2013, however and of particular importance is that none of
the
witnesses alluded to the role of Dr Nadia during the BET although her
name was thrown around. Ms N[...] says on arrival
at CMJAH the
baby was not attended by a doctor until the next day.
[13]
According to Prof Bolton the procedure is usually performed in an
intensive
care unit under a radiant heat source for removal of
bilirubin in a double volume exchange.
13.1
That a large bore catheter is inserted into a central vein via the
umbilical vein.
13.2
That warmed partially packed blood is used to replace the baby’s
own blood utilising
a dilutional technique and small amounts of the
baby’s blood are removed and replaced by the donor blood.
13.3
That this procedure is performed under
sterile conditions with
the baby being closely monitored and which
process could take up to an hour to complete.
[14]
There is a clash of opinion between Prof. Bolton and Prof Smith about
the handling
of blood prior to the exchange. Prof Bolton espouses for
adding heparin (a blood thinning product) and
calcium gluconate
to the blood before the exchange and gently tilting the blood pack to
mix the products. Prof Bolton also alluded to warming the
blood by
using a coil. The temperature should be closely monitored to avoid
overheating or causing the baby hypothermia.
[15]
Prof Smith vehemently denies this state of affairs by saying,
“
[y]ou’re not supposed to add anything to the blood,
as adding may change the PH of the blood.”
He goes on
to state that blood for transfusion has coagulants.
[16]
The addition of
calcium gluconate
and
heparin
can cause
clotting if it comes into contact with red blood cells. Prof
Smith is adamant that if blood is warmed to more than
37 degrees
Celsius, it haemolyses. Haemolyses means red blood cells were broken
down and extrudes haemoglobin and potassium. He
went on to say
that
specimen “JTR 0084/13” was badly haemolysed
according to records.
He does not agree with the stance of Matron
Loghat and Dr Varughese that the only practical way to warm the blood
is with water.
He also does not agree that replacement of the
baby’s blood within 15 minutes is allowed, he says it goes
against norms
and standards.
[17]
The evidence of Dr Mammen, according to him, was drawn from hospital
notes
and the protocol book. He testified there had been a doctor who
worked at night. None of the witnesses alluded to the night
doctor or their role when the baby landed at CMJAH on 21 February at
23:33. Dr Mammen carried out the exchange at 14:45 on the
22 February
2013. He describes the child as crying but stable, temperature was
36.4, and that blood sugar was 2.5 which was on
the lower end of the
scale. The bilirubin reading was measured to be 482 - still above the
exchange level.
[18]
Dr Mammen testified further that he followed the protocols of Rahima
Moosa
Mother and Child Hospital and Chris Hani Baragwanath
Hospital in Gauteng, which is to add 400ml of
heparin
and 4ml
of
calcium gluconate
for such procedures to the donor blood.
He testified that he wrote “shake well to mix all the added
products and to distribute
them well together”. Dr Mammen was
taken to task about the shaking and mixing of the products because
both Prof Smith and
Dr Maponya (a paediatrician) testified that
shaking blood will surely haemolyse it. Dr Mammen agrees blood may
have been haemolysed
but not by adding the items added.
[19]
Dr Mammen does not know how or by who the blood was warmed as
per protocol
and tends to hazard a guess that it may be the nurses.
He further testified that, it took him 15 minutes to transfuse 120ml
of
blood, at that time the baby stopped breathing (suffered an
apnoea). Saturation dropped to a certain level, they then performed
a
mouth to mouth resuscitation and put nasal oxygen, the baby responded
well with saturation reverting to 90, the heart rate 135
and the
blood sugar at 6.6.
[20]
At 15:15 another BET was performed where 140ml of blood was
transfused, this
was after consulting by telephone with the
specialist Dr Varughese. The baby developed a rash on her face
according to Dr Mammen,
although U’s mother observed a red rash
all over the tiny body. Everyone agrees that the baby passed a
bloody stool.
This, according to Professors Smith and Bolton, are
complications of a BET. The BET process was then halted. One Dr Chaya
performed
another one on 23 February 2013, which according to all
witnesses was uneventful.
[21]
During Dr Mammen’s evidence the ABO incompatibility was
canvassed as
a cause of the baby’s collapse. The mother’s
blood group was O positive while the baby’s was B positive. The
ABO group’s incompatibility between mother and child is an
extremely common finding and does not warrant any intervention
after
birth. The plaintiff, in its particulars of claim, had alleged
that the defendant was negligent in not predicting the
development of
jaundice on the baby. A
coombs test
was conducted on
both mother and child, both had a negative test result. Dr Mammen
confirmed during his cross-examination that
ABO incompatibility was
indeed not an issue since the
coombs test
came out negative.
Bet
Complications
[22]
Complications associated with the BET procedure were canvassed by all
experts.
Prof Bolton accepted that oxygen levels in the baby’s
blood dropped to unacceptable levels, she developed bruising
(haematoma)
or red marks on her skin as alluded to by both the mother
and Dr Mammen. By 23 February 2013 the baby had stabilised,
seizures
which she suffered had been controlled with phenobarbital.
The above state of affairs was confirmed by the mother who is adamant
that she did not meet Dr Nadia on arrival at CMJAH at 23:30, but she
and her baby slept until the next day, 22 February 2013, when
her
baby was taken for the BET. Upon the baby’s return, she saw
blood spots on her skin, her baby was breathing by a tube
and passed
a bloody stool. She testified that a doctor told her, “
sorry
mama we tried your child won’t hear, sit or do anything without
help”.
On 23 February, the child suffered seizures.
[23]
Prof Smith is adamant that whether the Court finds that there was an
onset
of
encephalopathy
at CMJAH does not exclude the fact
that the child had increased bilirubin which, if managed correctly
could have saved the baby’s
woes. He described that the baby’s
condition was at the first stage of encephalopathy. He describes it
as a stage of irritability
and extensive crying. He cautioned that
one need not tick all the boxes and that crying was a common
feature. He goes on
to say that the picture became complicated
but that at transfusion the picture of encephalopathy was there as
the baby deteriorated
in the morning hence the delay. Prof
Smith noted the nurse’s entry that the condition of the baby
was not well and
that the baby was crying and jaundiced. He deems
these symptoms in keeping with cerebral irritation in that she could
not console
the baby. The mother also testified that she should have
attended a routine check up on day three but went on day two since
her
baby cried continuously. He testifies that the hospital
staff was slow to do a BET or send the blood for a cross-match
whether
they noticed symptoms or not because early onset is
reversible with appropriate treatment. Prof Smith goes on to say that
replacement
of blood within 15 minutes as alluded to by Dr Mammen
goes against protocols, plus blood can’t be warmed which is why
it
haemolysed.
[24]
Dr Maponya also simply described a 120ml exchange within 15 minutes
as “too
quick”. She told the Court that if one does
that, “
a heart will go into shock”.
She attributes
this to the oxygen saturation dropping to below acceptable levels.
She also criticised the second failed attempt
at a BET, describing
a140ml exchange in 15 minutes as “
way too fast”.
The
doctor suggested that it could cause a blood reaction if one
exchanges too quick, a common complication. Both Dr Maponya
and
Dr Kgabi agree that there was substandard management in treating the
child. Over and above saturation which went below
acceptable
levels, the baby suffered an
apnoeic attack
, saturation that
went low, and lastly, a bloody stool - all complications of BET. The
total bilirubin serum of 517 was neurotoxic
whether one saw the signs
or not.
[25]
Prof Smith puts the delay at the door of health officials because a
nurse called
an ambulance again at 20:30 as the baby’s
condition remained unchanged. Another call followed at 21:45,
one Tebogo
was spoken to, he promised an ambulance will be
despatched, it only arrived at 23:00 when it was summoned at 18:30
already. According
to Prof Smith, the transfer of information from
doctor to doctor was poor. This, he says, because the baby’s
diagnoses were
known by 17:00, the reason for the transfer to CMJAH
was also well known to the medical staff. The baby was put on “nil
per
os” in anticipation of a blood exchange transfusion. Prof
Smith says a body starved of nutrition for so long could cause the
body to go into stress mode. He testified that by shaking the blood,
the cells broke down and the capacity to carry red blood cells
was
reduced.
[26]
Prof Smith asserts that the dual pathology causing brain damage was
foreseeable
and preventable. Prof Bolton, while he concedes that
there were delays in getting the results and finding a venue for the
exchange,
states that the child looked good and damage was not
foreseeable. He described acute bilirubin as a progressive condition
and that
if a baby has signs, they will be sedated and the condition
will worsen. He says delays did not cause brain damage. Prof Bolton
attributes the injury to a hypoxic event during blood exchange
transfusion. This in his explanation means, if during the exchange
bilirubin is let into the brain, an imperfect storm results in
damages. According to him, U developed a multi-organ failure after
the exchange. He says the contributing factors were, (1) severe
neonatal jaundice; and (2) collapse during the exchange. Prof Smith
on the other hand thinks the first collapse during the exchange was
not enough to cause damage.
Screening
for Sibling Jaundice
[27]
Professor Smith alluded to sibling jaundice, he asserted that since
the mother’s
two children had jaundice at birth, this patient
should have been flagged. He places blame at the door of the
pre-natal clinic
which should have warned the mother of the high risk
of baby U developing jaundice due to a history of sibling jaundice in
the
family.
Issues
for Determination by Court
[28]
The Court has to determine whether the brain damage which manifested
in down
syndrome on baby U was:
[a]
Foreseeable; and
[b]
Preventable
Is
there a causal link between the catastrophic brain damage suffered by
baby U to the management of jaundice by the health
institutions?
Analysis
[29]
All experts are in agreement with the report of Dr Bengu (a medical
geneticist)
that a genetic cause for the neurological condition is
unlikely. She found that there was severe
hyperbilirubinemia
and a history of
acute apnoea and a hypoxic episode leading to
acute ischemic encephalopathy.
Dr Mogashoa (a paediatric
neurologist) was not privy to the MRI findings, she considered that
the brain damage was probably caused
by bilirubin encephalopathy
(kernicterus). Similarly, Dr Mbhokota (an obstetrician) noted
that the MRI report confirms that
the child suffered an
acute
profound hypoxic
brain injury.
[30]
In
PriceWaterhouse
Coopers Inc. and Others v National Potato Co-operative Ltd and
Another
,
[1]
duties and responsibilities of expert witnesses in civil cases were
outlined as follows that:
[a]
Expert evidence presented to the Court should be seen to be the
independent product of the expert,
uninfluenced as to form or content
by the exigencies of litigation . . .
[b]
An expert witness should provide independent assistance
to the Court
by way of objective unbiased opinion in relation to matters within
his expertise … An expert in the High Court
should never
assume the role of advocate.
[c]
An expert witness should state facts or assumptions on
which his
opinion is based. He should not omit to consider material facts which
detract from his concluded opinion . . .
[d]
An expert witness should make it clear when a particular
question or
issue falls outside his expertise.”
[31]
Observations made by the Court are that almost all experts agree on
the outcome
of baby U’s condition and what brought it about.
[32]
Dr Kgabi (paediatrician) opines that there was a gross delay in
making the
decision and performing the blood exchange transfusion.
She goes on to say that the delay may have contributed to baby U’s
poor neurological outcome.
[33]
Dr Bhengu (the medical geneticist), noted that there was severe
hyperbilirubinemia
and a history of acute
apnoea/hypoxic
episode leading to
acute ischemic encephalopathy.
She however
rules out genetic causes for the neurological condition.
[34]
Dr Mogashoa, (a paediatric neurologist) considered that brain damage
was probably
caused by
bilirubin encephalopathy (kernicterus).
She was not privy to MRI findings. Dr Mbhokota (obstetrician) noted
that the MRI report confirms that the child suffered an acute
profound hypoxic brain injury and in the absence of any evidence of
intrapartum hypoxia, the brain injury was therefore suffered
in the
post-natal period. There were no intrapartum hypoxic episodes.
[35]
Professor Du Plessis (a nursing expert) notes that the baby was born
healthy
with normal Apgar scores after a normal vaginal delivery.
Doctors Maponya and Kgabi’s joint report stated that the
impairment suffered by baby U is due to substandard management of
jaundice and a delay in performing a blood transfusion. There
has
been issue with the fact that the Defendant received Dr Kgabi’s
report by 7 September 2020 and was satisfied with
it. They never
indicated an intention to repudiate it. The Plaintiff alleges that
this move by the Defendant is in bad faith.
[36]
Professor Bolton, while he admits that there was some delay in the
provision
of an ambulance for the transfer of baby U, he alleges that
ambulance services often function under pressure and this may have
been the case here. A five hour delay cannot be justified. He
accepts that the baby’s bilirubin level although
“substantially”
reduced, this in reference to the 471
umol/L, he agrees it is still extremely raised hence the child was
placed under double phototherapy.
He testified that blood was
requisitioned from the South African Blood Services and that a blood
specimen for mother and baby for
grouping and compatibility has to be
transported to the central branch of the SA National Blood Service.
The specimen was processed
at 10:36 on the 22 February 2013 and the
blood requested for the exchange was released at 12:00 noon. This was
in justifying the
delay for the procedure to commence. Professor
Bolton deems the dominant injury on U’s brain compatible with
an “
acute profound hypoxic ischemic injury to the basal
ganglia thalamus”.
According to him there is a less
prominent pattern revealing bilateral injury to the Globus Pallidus
and hippocampus which is suggestive
of bilirubin toxicity. Professor
Bolton says the turnaround time for blood results is not excessive at
3 hours although the results
revealed a very high bilirubin of 512
umol/L and that this level can be corrected by a BET.
[37]
Professor Smith is a neonatologist (with knowledge of new-borns) over
and above being
a paediatrician of 30 years and counting. He
testified that when unconjugated bilirubin levels are high
kernicterus will manifest.
The baby was at 17:50 awaiting bilirubin
results as double phototherapy was administered on the baby, also
that 2:45 minutes later
at 17:53 nurses recorded the baby as not
well, “jaundice++”, an indication of raised levels at 517
umol/l. According
to Prof Smith, this level threatened the baby’s
brain. He further stated that a combination of changes in
consciousness,
muscle tone and seizures are all signs of cerebral
irritation related to toxic bilirubin levels. The baby was said to be
unwell
and irritable at 17:45. When asked to explain bilirubin
induced brain damage, he responded; “
irritability, excessive
crying, poor ability to suck, raised temperature and the baby may
suffer seizures”.
To a question on whether encephalopathy
can be reversed he answered, “
if it scores below a certain
number you can reverse the symptoms and outcomes, but if they
instituted a BET they would have reduced
the levels but at 517
bilirubin the baby may have incurred a degree of injury”.
It was put to Prof Smith that Dr Mogashoa in her report spoke of
slight stupor, slight hypertonia, paucity of movement, and a slight
high pitch cry to which he responded, “that’s why I said
this is an initial phase of irritability and extensive cry,
initial
stage
viz
(encephalopathy). Prof Smith stated that one does
not have to tick all boxes and that crying was a common feature when
bilirubin
levels were high. As it was put to him during
cross-examination that at 17:45 there was no description of a high
pitch cry,
he answered “
excessive crying has to be
considered, you can’t play with this, it is a foregone
conclusion the brain was damaged”.
[38]
Professor Smith accepts that there was no evidence of kernicterus at
CMJAH,
he however says acute bilirubin precedes kernicterus. He says
blood banks are handled by technicians, doctors as physicians should
insist and be in communication with the blood banks. When, in
para15.1 of the report, the nurse noted the condition of baby U as
not well and that the baby was crying and had jaundice++, it was a
sign she could not console the baby. He is adamant that the
staff was
slow to send blood for a cross match and to perform a BET
irrespective of whether they noticed symptoms or not. At
13:30
on 22 February the baby was transferred from the ward in a “sick
condition” with a drip inserted. Professor
Smith states that
“sick” means the baby has the signs and symptoms for a
jaundiced baby and that furthermore, “it
is worrying”. He
says that it is not true that the reaction during the BET started an
hour later, in fact, it started within
15 minutes of the exchange. He
also alludes to the fact that a term baby has 80ml of blood per
kilogram. Baby U was 3,2kg
and during the exchange, Dr Mammen
exchanged 40% of the baby’s volume in 15 minutes i.e. 260 ml.
[39]
Professor Smith blames the heating of the blood by saying “blood
can’t
be put in warm water, the chance that you exceed 36
degrees Celsius is high”. He finds no other reason why the
blood haemolysed.
Similarly, the blood pack cannot be shaken. Lastly
the JTR 0084/13 specimen of 1 March 2013 was recorded as “badly
haemolysed”.
[40]
Dr Sheba Keresa Varughese a factual witness (paediatric consultant)
in charge
of the unit at CMJAH testified that Dr Nadia was the
registrar on call. She said a call came at midnight or the
early hours
about a child with a high bilirubin, she says Dr Nadia
would have seen the child but she goes on to say that the notes were
not
available. She admitted blood was ready however there was a
problem with the ward and baby U needed to be moved to another ward
for the BET. She also states that how the blood was warmed is not
documented and it was not recorded. During her cross-examination
on a
question of what level of bilirubin would be sufficient to penetrate
the brain she answered “
we look at the baby’s weight,
age, level of bilirubin” she went on to say “517 is quite
high”.
When it was put to her that the baby suffered a
double blow due to haemolysed blood according to the radiologist she
answered,
“
I don’t agree with haemolysed blood, the
child had a high bilirubin. which if in my view managed correctly,
the baby’s
brain would have been saved.”
[41]
Although Prof. Bolton agrees there were some delays in getting
results and
finding a venue, he insists the child looked good and he
does not believe the damage was foreseeable. This statement goes
against
the opinion of all other experts. The Court finds his opinion
biased in favour of the Defendant. When he is confronted with the
evidence and asked why he did not record a call made at 20:30, he
says he did not deem it necessary as it would cause his report
to
have too much information. As long as there is some admissible
evidence upon which the expert’s evidence is based,
it cannot
be ignored, but it follows that the more an expert relies on facts
and not on evidence, the weight given to his opinion
will diminish.
For example, when it was put to Prof Bolton that the baby was crying,
he dismissed it as babies cry for various
reasons, not taking into
account that the baby cried inconsolably and was described by Prof
Smith as the onset of encephalopathy.
An opinion based on facts and
not on evidence has no probative value to the Court. The
records pointed to crying, irritability
and jaundice which cannot be
styled as something other than what the nurses observed.
Radiology
Reports of Doctor Weinstein and Prof Andronikou
[42]
An MRI of the brain was performed on the child when she was six years
and eight
months’ old. The joint minutes of the plaintiff and
defendant’s radiologists are largely in agreement. They agree
that
the MRI demonstrates features of a prior profound hypoxic injury
with the
basal ganglia thalamus and peri-rolandic pattern or acute
profound pattern
. In addition, the radiologists agree that there
are MRI changes compatible with bilirubin toxicity mandating clinical
and laboratory
correlation.
[43]
Dr Keshave, the paediatric neurologist noted that the child had
microcephaly and dystonic cerebral palsy
complicated by global
developmental delay, intellectual disability, symptomatic epilepsy,
kyphosis and pseudobulbar palsy.
Dr Keshave concluded
that baby U suffers from kernicterus secondary to delayed
identification and management of
hyperbilirubinemia
. In
this regard Prof Bolton states that it is not easy to distinguish
between the clinical nature of the cerebral palsy caused
by damage to
the basal ganglia from hypoxia ischaemia versus that caused by
bilirubin toxicity. Dr Smith on the other hand
accepts Dr Keshave’s
conclusion that baby U suffered from kernicterus secondary to a
delayed identification of hyperbilirubinemia.
Common
Cause Issues
[44]
The following issues are common cause:
44.1
Baby U was born on 19 February 2013 at 12h40 at the South Rand
District Hospital weighing
3,490 grams with good Apgar scores.
44.2
At 16:50 baby U was seen by a doctor who noted on day 0 of life
at +/- 4 hours past
normal vaginal delivery that baby U was
asymptomatic, feeding normally, had passed stools and urine (meconium
noted), pink hydration,
respiration clear, cardiovascular system
normal, abdomen soft and non-tender, central nervous system normal
and good reflexes.
[45]
The child was assessed; the plan was to discharge the minor child on
breastfeeding.
Both mother and child were discharged at 17:40 from
the maternity register by a sister Ntshobane. She recorded that
mother and
baby were in a satisfactory condition. Both mother and
child were collected by the mother’s husband at 18:40. This
evidence
dispels the assertion that the baby was discharged within
two hours of its birth and it has been accepted by experts that
discharge
within six hours is standard worldwide.
[46]
The Plaintiff s cause of action as pleaded in the particulars of
claim is based
on the legal duty owed to baby U arising from the
negligent conduct of the medical practitioners and staff in the
employ of the
Defendant in that:
[a]
They failed to timeously provide transport to transfer
U from SRH to
CMJAH;
[b]
They failed to do a blood test to ascertain the compatibility
between
the Plaintiff’s blood group -
O rhesus positive
- and
the baby’s
B rhesus positive
;
[c]
They failed to timeously detect and avoid jaundice of
baby U, by
conducting the blood compatibility coombs test between her blood
group and that of the plaintiff;
[d]
They failed to appreciate that a high serum concentration
of
unconjugated bilirubin in the blood of baby U could cause permanent
brain damage;
[e]
They failed to transport baby U timeously to CMJAH for
a blood
exchange transfusion;
[f]
They failed to timeously deliver baby U for
treatment at CMJAH to be
rendered by Dr Nadia or any other medical officer;
[g]
They failed to timeously conduct a blood exchange transfusion;
[h]
They failed to provide an
anti D immunoglobin
after delivery;
[i]
They failed to do an exchange transfusion
when the total serum
bilirubin approached dangerous levels.
[47]
In their amended plea dated 20 November 2019, the Defendant denied
all allegations
and pleaded that, in the event that the Court finds
that there was negligence, there was no casual connection between the
negligence
and the cerebral palsy. The Plaintiff alleged that the
hospital staff employed the wrong procedure in performing the blood
exchange
transfusion because the transfusion blood was wrong and as a
result the blood haemolysed, plus that the process was performed too
quickly.
[48]
The Defendant pleaded that blood was ordered as soon as baby U
arrived at CMJAH,
and that the delay in receiving the blood was not
attributable to negligence on the part of the hospital, but rather on
the part
of the South African National Blood Services, which is a
separate entity to the Defendant and out of CMJAH’s control.
[49]
The Defendant further pleaded that baby U had no signs of
neurological compromise
on 21 February 2013 at 19:30 before her
transfer from South Rand to CMJAH, however, at 17:45 on 21 February
South Rand Hospital
recorded
baby U’s condition not well,
crying, irritable with jaundice++.
This was the time when
the laboratory called to say the serum bilirubin of baby U was 517.
[50]
A doctor was called at 18:15 (Modise) to transfer U to CMJAH, the
latter discussed
with Dr Nadia whose notes are unavailable, nor was
her role articulated upon baby U’s arrival at CMJAH when the
ambulance
ultimately ferried U and the Plaintiff at 23:30. According
to the Plaintiff, a factual witness, she and baby U were not attended
by anyone until she was taken for the blood exchange transfusion on
22 February 2013 at 10:00. The above is against information
that at
23:23 baby U was seen at CMJAH by a doctor whose name is not
mentioned who noted the following, “
well jaundiced,
vigorous, flat fontanelle, good cry, moving all limbs, normal tone,
normal reflexes”.
The doctor noted that there was no
evidence of kernicterus and was diagnosed at day 3 with neonatal
jaundice. The plan was
to admit and administer strong phototherapy,
bloods for FBC, urgent SBR, blood group coombs test for mother and
baby and to administer
intravenous fluids.
[51]
On 22 February 2013 baby U was seen at 09:05 and it was noted that
she was
on day 4 of life with no kernicterus on examination, she was
looking well, not dysmorphic, jaundice under phototherapy, not pale,
spine normal, chest clear, abdomen contained no organomegaly,
kernicterus was diagnosed as neonatal jaundice and there was ABO
incompatibility. The plan was to follow up on bloods, to put the
child on nil per OS (no feeding) and urgent SBR transfusion.
The mother was extensively counselled, she gave consent, the plan was
to fetch blood from the blood bank.
[52]
Baby U was transferred from ward 286 to 287 since according to the
nurses,
the exchange could only be carried out in 287. The
expiry date on
blood pack number 22315183
was 23 February
2013.
[53]
At 10:21 on 22 February 2013, the baby was recorded as stable but
crying, pulse
120, respiratory rate 30, saturation 100%, temperature
36.4, hgt 2.5, central nervous system awake, soft fontanelle, chest
clear,
cardiovascular system normal with no murmurs, abdomen soft not
distended,
umbilicus venus line (UVL)
under sterile technique,
and intravenous line (IV) inserted on the left hand.
[54]
Prof Smith stated that 517 bilirubin is associated with 50% of
cerebral palsy
babies. He is adamant that the excessive delay
in the transfer of U was grossly substandard practice, and has
contributed
to bilirubin-induced encephalopathy and brain injury as
seen on the MRI. He was critical of the 10-hour delay by the
South
African National Blood Service in processing the blood which he
branded excessive and blamed CMJAH for failure to inform the blood
bank that blood was urgently required. He described the blood staff
as technicians and that physicians (doctors) are the ones who
should
convey the urgency of a transfusion on a new born whose bilirubin
stood at dangerous levels.
[55]
Doctors Kgabi (Defendant’s expert) and Maponya stated in their
report
that baby U had a mixed type cerebral palsy, which is
associated with global development delay with hearing loss,
malnutrition,
mental impairment, epilepsy that is caused by
bilirubin
encephalopathy
that resulted from substandard management of
severe jaundice (hyperbilirubinemia)
and the delay in
conducting a blood exchange transfusion. In their heads of argument,
the Defendant criticises the evidence of
Dr Maponya as not being
supported by objective evidence. It is argued that her evidence
contradicts her own report.
The Defendant asserts that there is
no causal link between the conduct of its employees and the clinical
condition and outcome
of baby U as the Plaintiff failed to prove
causation on the part of Defendant’s employees.
[56]
Dr Mammen reiterated in his viva voce evidence that when the BET
commenced,
the child was awake. He used the protocol of adding
heparin and gluconate and shook to mix the products well. The baby
was 3,2
kg so he needed to exchange the baby s blood at 180ml per
kilo which works out to 576mls that should be given over 1 hour. This
is divided by 4, meaning 144ml should be given in 15 minutes. Dr
Mammen is adamant that the blood pack was not haemolysed. This
is
against Prof Smith’s evidence that the pack had in fact
haemolysed.
[57]
Dr Mammen is also of the view that even though the coombs test was
negative,
the mother’s blood can react to baby’s blood
and a reaction can manifest regardless. When asked why there
was
a delay to do a BET, he answered as follows, “
[t]he
blood was ordered when the baby arrived at CMJAH, and as soon as the
blood was ready we got it and we tried our best, given
the
circumstances and despite the challenges to do the exchange, to
protect the baby and despite the initial concern, we said we
have to
do the exchange now.”
[58]
This answer does not inspire confidence in a practitioner who is
about to perform
a life-threatening procedure on a three-day old
neonate. When a question was posed to him about who warmed the blood,
Dr Mammen
had no clue who did or what means were employed. The Court
find this very sloppy as he was supposed to have managed this
complicated
process from A to Z. Equally when a question was
posed about the words written by Dr Mammen in reference to the adding
of
heparin and gluconate and shaking well, he conveyed a reply which
was less than satisfactory that he did not mean a vigorous mix
but
just to get the products to gel well together.
[59]
Dr Mamman breached the
duty owed to baby U when instead of fully supervising the blood
warming process, he allowed the nurses to
carry out the important
duty. In
Life
Healthcare Group (Pty) Ltd v Suliman
,
[2]
Dr Suliman manifested his responsibility by giving instructions to a
nurse to allow labour to proceed, and to sedate if necessary
and
prescribe medication. The SCA held that, “[i]n our law a
negligent omission is only unlawful if it occurs in circumstances
that the law regards as sufficient to give rise to a legal duty to
avoid negligently causing harm”.
[60]
The Court finds that substandard care was meted out to baby U because
if baby U
and her mother landed at CMJAH at 23:30 and blood was
ordered at that time only for it to be fetched by Dr Hunt at 12
midday on
22 February (the next day) and for the process to commence
later on for a life-threatening condition is excessively sloppy and
substandard especially because the bilirubin level of 517 had an
insignificant decline to 482 which is still above the exchange
level.
This coupled with the knowledge by staff at CMJAH that ward 286 is
not suited for a BET, when the decision to move the child
to 287 was
made, surely damage was manifesting on the baby. Prof Bolton
for the Defendant agrees to a note in the hospital
records that
described the baby as “sleepy”.
[61]
Prof Smith espoused that the hospital entry of irritable and jaundice
++ meant
the baby was inconsolable and he deemed this the early onset
of brain damage, which with appropriate treatment, would have been
reversed. Clearly double phototherapy was not successful and
the only route was a BET, which was delayed with haemolysed
blood.
All experts are
ad idem
that shaking the blood
vigorously and subjecting it to too much heat/cold can haemolyse it.
Dr Maponya also described
“irritable” as
meaning inconsolable no matter what you do to the baby. She said the
brain now has neurotoxins. Prof
Smith goes on to say that the staff
was slow to send the blood for cross-matching and performing a BET
whether they noticed symptoms
or not.
[62]
In her testimony, Dr Varughese stated that Dr Mammen had performed
several
BETs, during Dr Mammen’s cross examination he said this
was his second. He had only been one year and seven months into his
training as a paediatrician.
Dr Nadia was not called to testify
about her role, she was the doctor communicated with to effect the
transfer, the fact that her
notes are unavailable does not assist the
Defendant’s case.
How does an academic hospital such as
CMJAH leave a neonate whose bilirubin level stubbornly refuses to
lower from 23:00 on 21 February
until 22 February after midday?
This clearly displays a nonchalant attitude.
[63]
On the other hand, Prof Bolton presented a graph and mentioned 427 as
a level
at which unconjugated bilirubin penetrates the brain cells to
cause kernicterus. When a question is posed about this level
he
responded, “
[t]his is the level at which kernicterus becomes
more likely”.
He, however, contradicted himself when he
said, “
[t]he child did not have kernicterus at the time of
exchange, despite delays this was not cause of kernicterus on baby
U”.
Asked if irritability was a sign that something was
terribly wrong with a child whose bilirubin was 517 he responded,
“
crying and irritable is not a sensitive or specific for a
very ill baby, most babies who are taken to hospital and who are
being
treated while their mothers are anxious and being moved around
are crying and irritable.”
The mother should have returned
to South Rand on day three for a routine check-up, but her baby was
crying and unwell hence she
went before the scheduled time.
[64]
Prof Bolton also referred to a book by Josef Volpes regarding initial
and intermediate
set in of encephalopathy. He explained moderate
stupor as a semi-coma where the child is not arousable, its level of
consciousness
is below normal. Although not readily, he
admitted to an entry of the records that the child was sleepy but
denies it was
due to kernicterus, instead attributing the complexity
of baby U’s case to
hypoxic ischemia
and that this
opened the door for
hyperbilirubinemia damage.
He says
the baby had an unexpected and probably unpredictable reaction during
the exchange.
[65]
On the issue of whether there had been negligence on the part of the
pre-natal
clinic having not outlined the issue of sibling jaundice,
Prof Bolton conceded that he was not aware whether there was a
guideline
on this matter which dealt with whether history should be
taken from the mother. Perhaps if the full history was taken about
sibling
jaundice, this would have alerted South Rand to be on the
lookout. Be that as it may, on 21 Feb 2013, a bilirubin level of 517
was well known to the hospital staff, this was an emergency case for
fear that once the bilirubin reached dangerous levels, it could
cause
irreparable harm. If operations can be done at night, why couldn’t
this procedure be carried out when baby U arrived
at CMJAH? Was it
not negligent to let baby U sleep with a high level of bilirubin?
According to the mother, they were seen by a
doctor only around 10:00
the next morning. CMJAH is a provincial academic hospital and it has
the capability to perform BETS within
their facility, their
laboratory operates 24 hours.
[66]
How the procedure was conducted in terms of adding heparin and
calcium gluconate
and heating and shaking the items was not pleaded
by the Plaintiff. Similarly, the Defendant attempted to introduce
documents not
discovered in terms of the rules. Courts should in
civil matters be wary to accept a disregard of the rule
The
Legal Position
[67]
For the Defendant to be liable for a loss, the act/omission of the
Defendant
must be wrongful and negligent and have brought about loss.
Negligent conduct giving rise to loss is not actionable unless it is
wrongful. Where negligent conduct manifests in a positive act that
causes physical harm, this is prima facie wrongful, however
a
negligent omission will only attract liability when the legal
convictions of the community impose a legal duty as opposed to
a
moral duty to avoid harm to others by a positive act. While the Court
expects medical practitioners to exercise reasonable skill
and care
in their respective field, the determination of negligence in a given
case falls within the Court’s purview.
[68]
The correct approach to
the assessment of expert evidence was nicely set out in
Michael
and Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and Another (1)
where the SCA
stated:
[3]
“
It
is perhaps as well to re-emphasise that the question of
reasonableness and negligence is one for the court itself to
determine
on the basis of the various, and often conflicting, expert
opinions presented.”
[69]
What is required in the evaluation of such evidence is to determine
whether
and to what extent the opinions advanced are founded on
logical reasoning. The Court is not bound to absolve a Defendant from
liability
for negligent medical treatment or diagnoses just because
evidence of expert opinion, albeit genuinely held, is that the
treatment
or diagnoses in issue accorded with sound medical practice.
The Court must be satisfied that such opinion has a logical
basis.
[70]
Expert witnesses involve the drawing of inferences from facts.
The inferences
must be reasonably capable of being drawn from those
facts. If they are tenuous or far-fetched, they cannot form a
foundation
for a Court to make any finding of fact. Is the
reasoning of the expert consistent with established facts? Just
as
an example, Prof Bolton conceded that it was misleading of him to
say predominant lesions are those produced by acute profound ischemic
insult as opined in his report as opposed to the subtle features
suggestive of bilirubin damage. He also conceded that the
danger level of 400 umol/l was where the neurological toxicity or
kernicterus becomes likely, this is supported by his own graph.
Prof.
Bolton also speculated about the so-called blood reaction by baby U
during the BET, this was not even pleaded.
[71]
Only Prof Bolton randed
the hospital records scanty whilst all other experts are
ad
idem
about
baby Us’ outcome. He is the only one who says the cause
of the collapse is speculative. See
Bee
v Road Accident Fund
in
which the SCA held that, “[w]here certain facts are agreed
between parties in civil litigation, the court is bound by such
agreement”
[4]
. Dr Kgabi
opined that “
[t]here
was a gross delay in making the decision to perform a BET and that
the delay may have contributed to baby U’s poor
neurological
outcome.”
Dr Weinstein
(a specialist radiologist) commented that “
[t]he
pattern of the brain injury suffered by U was acute profound HIE and
the MRI changes compatible with bilirubin encephalopathy”.
Dr Bengu, a paediatrician
and geneticist, opined that the brain damage may be caused by
excessively high unconjugated bilirubin
due to delayed treatment.
[72]
It is poignant that the Defendant did not present the testimony of Dr
Nadia,
who supposedly played a critical part in the treatment of baby
U, given that she was the Dr whom baby U’s condition was
communicated
to prior to being to CMJAH. Furthermore, Dr Nadia’s
notes, which would have played an absolutely critical role in
determining
the treatment being administered to baby U, conveniently
and surreptitiously disappear and are unavailable for scrutiny by the
experts and consideration by the Court. This is one of the facts that
impacted negatively on the Defendant’s case and the
Court has
no option but to accept the Plaintiff’s claims as factual.
[73]
In this regard, I am
inclined to be swayed in the Plaintiff’s favour.
See
National
Employers’ General Insurance Co Ltd v Jagers
where the court stated
that:
[5]
“
It
seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal
case, the onus can ordinarily be discharged by adducing
credible
evidence to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests. In
a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy as
it is in a
criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff
as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive
stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the Court on a
preponderance of probabilities that his version
is true and accurate
and therefore acceptable, and that the other version advanced by the
defendant is therefore false or mistaken
and falls to be rejected. In
deciding whether the evidence is true or not the Court will weigh up
and test the plaintiff’s
allegations against the general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound
up with a consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff, then the Court
will accept his version as
probably true. If, however the probabilities are evenly balanced in
the sense that they do not favour
the plaintiff’s case any more
than they do the defendant’s, the plaintiff can only succeed if
the Court nevertheless
believes him and is satisfied that his
evidence is true and that the defendant’s version is false.”
[74]
Taking the above-mentioned principles into account, the Court is
inclined to
accept the version of the Plaintiff and reject the
Defendant’s version as not favoured by probabilities. The Court
finds
that the Plaintiff’s opinion is consistent with all the
established facts which have duly been proven. In the result the
Plaintiff’s claim is granted with costs.
Order
[75]
In the result the Plaintiff’s claim against the duty of care is
granted
with costs
A
E MPOFU
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Johannesburg]
Date
of Hearing:
28
August 2023 - 31 August 2023, 01 September 2023 - 09
September
2023, 26 September 2023 - 29 September 2023 & 03
November
2023
Date
of Judgment:
30
January 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv
L M M Moloisane SC & Adv K Moloisane
Instructed
by:
Nengwekhulu
Tshiwandalani Inc
For
the Defendant:
Adv
S Poswa-Lerotholi SC & Adv M Makamu
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
[1]
[2015] ZASCA 2
;
[2015] 2 All SA 403
(SCA) at para 98.
[2]
[2018] ZASCA 118
;
2019 (2) SA 185
(SCA) at para 10.
[3]
[2001] ZASCA 12
;
2001 (3) SA 1188
(SCA) at para 34.
[4]
2018] ZASCA 52
;
2018 (4) SA 366
(SCA) at para 64.
[5]
1984
(4) SA 437
(E) at 440D-G.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
N.S.F v R.H.F (2024/060778) [2025] ZAGPJHC 534 (2 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 534High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
L[...] D[...] K[...] v L[...] D[...] K[...] (2022/21021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1051 (14 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1051High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
T.N v S.N (14166/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 703 (22 July 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 703High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Q.N.M v M.M.M (2022/013249) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1317 (12 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1317High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
C.L.K v K.K.K (22/010214) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1287 (17 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1287High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar