Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 444South Africa
Mashele v The Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Provincial Department (2014/32526) [2022] ZAGPJHC 444 (27 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 June 2022
Headnotes
of this factual evidence first, not only because the plaintiff was the only factual witness but also because it provides a useful overview to appreciate the plaintiff’s case that there were hypoxic ischaemic injuries both before and after birth.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mashele v The Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Provincial Department (2014/32526) [2022] ZAGPJHC 444 (27 June 2022)
Mashele v The Member of the Executive Council for Health of the Gauteng Provincial Department (2014/32526) [2022] ZAGPJHC 444 (27 June 2022)
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sino date 27 June 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No.: 2014/32526
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
27
June 2022
In
the matter between:
MASHELE
,
MERRY JANE
Plaintiff
and
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
HEALTH
OF THE GAUTENG PROVINCIAL DEPARTMENT
Defendant
JUDGMENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and is deemed to
be
handed down upon such circulation.
Gilbert
AJ:
1.
The plaintiff was admitted to the Tembisa
Hospital during the late afternoon of 27 November 2012. She was in
the latent phase of
labour at the time, having been admitted to a
clinic earlier that day. The plaintiff would enter into the active
phase of labour
by at least 03h30 the next morning and would later
that morning, on 28 November 2012, at 11h10 give birth to a daughter
by way
of vaginal delivery.
2.
It
is common cause that the minor child sustained at least a
moderate-severe degree of brain damage (encephalopathy)
[1]
and that this resulted in profound global developmental delay,
microcephaly and mixed cerebral palsy (“the condition”).
It is also common cause that this brain damage was caused by an acute
profound hypoxic ischaemic injury. Put simplistically, the
minor
child suffered from brain damage arising from reduced oxygen supply
to her brain. A hypoxic ischaemic injury (“HII’)
is so
described, hypoxic referring to insufficient concentrations of oxygen
in the blood and ischaemic referring to insufficient
blood flow to
the brain.
3.
What the parties do not agree upon is when
this brain-damaging hypoxic ischaemic injury occurred. The
plaintiff’s case as
was advanced during the trial was that
hypoxic ischaemic injuries that are sufficient to cause the condition
happened
both
before and after the minor child’s birth, i.e., that the minor
had the misfortune of suffering at least two hypoxic ischaemic
injuries, each of which was sufficient to cause the condition, and
which cumulatively most definitely caused the condition. The
defendant contends that the only hypoxic ischaemic injury that took
place was the injury that took several hours after birth when
the
minor child was in the hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit
(“NICU”), and that it cannot be held liable
for that
injury.
4.
The plaintiff’s case of successive
hypoxic ischaemic injuries, as conducted during the course of the
trial before me, brings
a dimension to the matter of considerable
consequence, as will be seen later in this judgment.
5.
The plaintiff claims damages in her
representative capacity as the mother and natural guardian of the
minor child arising from the
condition brought about by the hypoxic
ischaemic injuries that she maintains were sustained by the minor
child before and after
her birth as a result of the negligence of the
hospital’s medical and/or nursing staff (“the medical
personnel”).
6.
The parties agreed that there should be a
separation of the issue of liability from the quantum of any damages,
as is usual in these
matters. At the commencement of the trial, I
granted a separation of issues provisionally in the sense that I
requested the parties
to frame an agreed formulation of the
separation. They subsequently did so, and so as per their agreed
formulation, the issue of
liability, inclusive of negligence and
causation, is separated in terms of Uniform Rule 33(4) of the Uniform
Rules of Court and
will be determined first and separately, with the
issue of quantum being postponed.
7.
It
is trite that for the plaintiff to succeed in her claim on behalf of
the minor child, she must prove wrongfulness, fault, causation
and
harm.
[2]
Before the trial
commenced, the parties filed a joint practice note in which they
recorded that the defendant accepted that the
plaintiff as the mother
of the minor child had
locus
standi
to pursue the claim, that the defendant was the responsible entity
liable for the damages if proven and that it, including the
medical
personnel, had a duty of care towards the plaintiff and her minor
child. The issue of harm (damages) has been postponed.
Accordingly,
the two elements of the delictual claim before me for decision are
those of negligence (fault) and causation.
8.
Only one factual witness would be led, that
was the plaintiff herself, who described the onset of labour before
she attended the
clinic, the latent phase of her labour while at the
clinic, her admission to the hospital during the late afternoon of 27
November
2012 because of the prolonged latent phase of the labour,
what happened at the hospital both before and after the birth of the
child at 11h10 the next day, 28 November 2012, and of her and then
later the daughter’s discharge from the hospital.
9.
I set out a summary of this factual
evidence first, not only because the plaintiff was the only factual
witness but also because
it provides a useful overview to appreciate
the plaintiff’s case that there were hypoxic ischaemic injuries
both before and
after birth.
A
SUMMARY OF THE PLAINTIFF’S EVIDENCE
10.
This was the mother’s first
pregnancy.
11.
The plaintiff (the mother) gave evidence
that she had neither consumed alcohol nor smoked during pregnancy and
was generally in
good personal health. She was not a sickly person,
and to the best of her knowledge was not suffering from any medical
condition
before she gave birth. The plaintiff testified that she was
not informed by the clinic that she was suffering from any medical
condition. Why this is important is because the defendant contends
that the plaintiff was suffering from pneumonia at the time and
that
she had passed this on to her baby
in
utero
and therefore that the common
cause acute profound hypoxic ischaemic injury to the minor child was
attributable to this congenital
pneumonia. Although there were
recordings by the attending doctor of pneumonia and severe pneumonia
in the hospital records in
respect of the minor child after her birth
(which will be considered in some detail later in this judgment), the
plaintiff under
cross-examination persisted that she had no
recollection of being informed by any medical personnel that she was
suffering from
pneumonia.
12.
The plaintiff testified that on the morning
of 27 November 2012, while she was bathing in the morning, she
noticed a discharge from
between her legs. As that was in any event
the day for her next scheduled clinic check-up for her pregnancy, she
took a taxi to
the clinic that morning. Upon arrival, the plaintiff
testifies, she was placed upon a bed and a “
belt
placed over her belly
” and that
something was connected to her arm. This ‘belt’ is a CTG
(cardiotocograph), which is used to measure
the foetal heart rate.
13.
The plaintiff testified that at the clinic
she felt unwell and was suffering from pain.
14.
The plaintiff stayed at the clinic for the
whole day until she was told late that afternoon that her baby “
was
not coming
” and that she was to
be taken to Tembisa Hospital by ambulance. The plaintiff was
uncertain of the timeframe but believed
this to be around 17h00.
15.
The plaintiff testifies that upon her
arrival at Tembisa Hospital, she was taken into a waiting area and
given a gown. She changed
into the gown and waited her turn.
16.
When it was her turn, she was moved to
another room where other ladies were in bed, giving birth.
17.
After an indeterminate time, as her water
had not broken, a “
lady
”
inserted a “
long thing
”
into her, in what the plaintiff thought was a successful attempt to
break her water as she did feel liquid running down
her legs. Upon
cross-examination, it was unclear whether this attempt succeeded. The
recordal in the clinical notes for 27 November
2012 at 22h30 is that
the “
attempt to rupture”
was not successful (at 006-142).
18.
During examination-in-chief, she said that
this “
lady
”
was a nurse as she did not remember seeing a doctor at that time at
the hospital. Under cross-examination the plaintiff
stated that the
person who inserted the “
long
thing
” into her may have been a
doctor or a nurse.
19.
The plaintiff continued under
examination-in-chief to testify that after the “
long
thing
” was inserted into her, her
waters broke. By then, the plaintiff describes, her pain was
unbearable and she was informed
by the nursing staff that she was
ready to give birth. She was told to push when the pain comes. The
plaintiff testifies that she
did this once, but the baby ‘did
not come’. When she did this a second time, the baby was born.
20.
The plaintiff testifies that her daughter
did not cry when she was born. The plaintiff testifies that she was
quickly shown the
baby, before the baby was taken away.
21.
The plaintiff then testified that she was
“
stitched up
”
and placed on a bench to wait.
22.
The plaintiff testifies that she was then
later taken to her baby, which she described as ‘just lying
there’, not crying.
While she was looking at her baby, a doctor
arrived, and he was “
mad
”
because oxygen to the baby had not been ‘turned on’. The
plaintiff testifies that the baby was then taken away
and she was
told again to sit in a waiting area. It would emerge from the
hospital records that this was the baby being taken away
to the NICU.
23.
During cross-examination, the plaintiff
would be challenged that this instance of her seeing her baby on 28
November 2012 (after
birth but before admission to the NICU) did not
take place, and essentially that it was fabricated. The
cross-examination was along
the lines that this instance of her
seeing her child was not recorded in the hospital records and that
the witness’ recollection
thereof was so vague that it
essentially was not credible. The plaintiff was referred to an
affidavit to which she had deposed
on 6 July 2016 in support of
an application for condonation for the late filing of the requisite
notice in terms of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings Against
Certain Organs of State, Act 2002
in which she had stated under oath
that “
upon being born the minor
child was immediately separated from me and taken to the Intensive
Care Unit
” and that “
I
was first able to see the minor child on the day following her
delivery
”. It was put to her that
this was inconsistent with her testimony before me of her seeing her
baby later that day, on 28
November 2012, before seeing the baby in
the NICU. It was also put to the plaintiff during cross-examination
that this instance
of seeing her baby after her birth but before
admission to the NICU was not part of the patient history given by
her to at least
two of the experts consulted in the matter for
purposes of giving expert evidence.
24.
The plaintiff testified that she was taken
later to see the baby in NICU, after she had been “stitched”,
where her daughter
had been attached to various “
machines
”,
with “
tubes and plugs on her
”.
The plaintiff said that she was told that this was necessary because
her baby did not cry when she was born. When asked
on the timeframe,
her testimony was that as she did not have her cell phone with her,
she was uncertain about the time these various
activities took place.
25.
The baby remained in the hospital, and the
plaintiff was discharged. The plaintiff had to return each day to
feed her baby (as the
plaintiff was not permitted to stay with her
baby in the hospital as there were no beds available), having
expressed breast milk
into a cup to enable the baby to feed as the
baby could not breastfeed.
26.
The plaintiff repeated during her evidence
that during her time at the hospital she did not suffer from any
flu-like symptoms or
have a fever.
27.
The cross-examination of the plaintiff
focused on certain of her evidence. The defendant sought to establish
from the plaintiff
that the “
belt
”
(CTG) that had been placed upon her at the hospital had been on her
“
the whole day
”,
i.e. until she gave birth to her daughter at 11h10 on 28 November
2012. Presumably the defendant was seeking to elicit
evidence that
the foetus was being monitored throughout, including until birth. The
plaintiff was referred to the history that
she had given to her
medical experts, Prof Solomons (a paediatric neurologist) and in
particular paragraph 3.2.1 at 008-12
where the following is recorded:
“
The mother
recalls that a cardiotocograph (CTG) was placed and kept on the
mother for the whole day”.
28.
The plaintiff did, to some extent, confirm
this although it did not appear to me that the plaintiff was
particularly clear on this.
29.
The relevance of this evidence is that the
plaintiff’s case is that there had been insufficient foetal
monitoring of the unborn
child during the active phase of labour,
which had commenced by a least 03h30 on 28 November 2012 until the
birth of the minor
child at 11h10. A partogram (a standardised
document on which labour observations are recorded) at page 006-148
shows that during
the active phase of labour recordings of foetal
monitoring had taken place on four occasions, between 03h30 and
08h30. In particular,
the partogram shows a recordal of a CTG reading
at 03h30, 05h30, 07h30, and 08h30, but not thereafter. There are
accordingly no
CTG recordings on the partogram in the three or so
hours immediately preceding birth i.e. from 08h30 to 11h10.
30.
The plaintiff’s expert, Prof Smith (a
neonatologist) would subsequently in his evidence be critical of this
for two reasons,
namely that the relevant published guidelines
required a CTG reading every half an hour during the active phase of
labour and,
secondly, there did not appear to be any readings at all
in the crucial hours preceding birth, i.e. from 08h30 to 11h10.
31.
On this, Prof Smith was challenged that it
did not necessarily follow that because there were no CTG readings
recorded on the partogram
during the period 08h30 to 11h10, that in
fact no monitoring had taken place during that period. The
defendant’s argument
was that the inadequate recordal of the
CTG readings did not mean that there was insufficient or negligent
monitoring of the foetus
during that period. Prof Smith’s
response was that in the absence of complete records, he could take
the matter no further.
32.
A second challenge of the plaintiff’s
evidence in cross-examination was that it had been a doctor that had
ruptured her waters
rather than a nurse and that accordingly a doctor
had been present at that time. Upon being pressed on this issue, the
plaintiff
conceded that she was unsure whether there may or may not
have been a doctor present at the time. It was put to the plaintiff
that
in paragraph 3.2.2 of her medical history given by her to Prof
Solomons (at 008 12) that she had said that “
later
that evening a doctor mechanically ruptured the membranes
”.
Ultimately the plaintiff’s evidence was unclear on this issue.
33.
The plaintiff was considerably
cross-examined on the second instance of her seeing her baby that
day, 28 November 2012 (i.e., after
it was born but before admission
to the NICU). It appears common cause that immediately after birth
the plaintiff was shown her
baby, which did not cry. It is also
common cause that later that day the plaintiff saw her baby in the
NICU. What is not common
cause is whether between these two instances
of the plaintiff seeing her baby on 28 November 2012 there was a
further instance
of her seeing her baby. The plaintiff contends that
about an hour later, after she had been “
stitched
up
” and left to sit on a bench,
she was called to a room where she saw her baby “
just
lying there
”, not crying, naked
and on top of a “
green thing
”.
This is the instance described above. When pressed in
cross-examination, the plaintiff testified that there did appear
to
be tubes going into the baby’s nose that were connected to an
oxygen tank and that it was because this oxygen tank was
not open
that the doctor that appeared while she was there looking at the baby
was “
mad
”
(a reference to being angry because the oxygen to the baby had not
been opened). The plaintiff testified under cross-examination
that
the medical personnel in response to the doctor’s anger
appeared to then “
panic
”,
she was asked to again return to the waiting area, and she did not
know what had then become of the baby. The plaintiff
testified that
after waiting for some time, she made enquiries and then later was
taken to see her baby, which by then was in the
NICU.
34.
A further ground of substantial challenge
of the plaintiff’s evidence under cross-examination was whether
the plaintiff had
been informed by the doctors that her daughter had
pneumonia at birth. The medical records refer to various instances of
the attending
doctor informing her that the child had pneumonia, but
the plaintiff testified that she did not recall being informed of
that.
The plaintiff said that all she was told was that the baby did
not cry when she was born, and that she needed machines to help the
flow of oxygen to the brain.
35.
For example, the nurses’
contemporaneous progress report show a note at 12h00 on
29 November 2012 that the “
parents
counselled on condition and prognosis by Dr Phudu
”
(at 006-110). The witness was again not entirely clear as to whether
she could recollect this but repeated that all she
was told and that
she could remember is that her baby did not have oxygen going to the
brain.
36.
To similar effect is an entry in the
attending doctor’s “Progress Note” (at 006-50) for
28 November 2012 at somewhere
between 19h00 and 21h30 where the
following is recorded in manuscript “
Mother
has been counselled. She reports that child didn’t cry
immediately after birth. Mother explained about birth asphyxia
and
severe cong [congenital] pneumonia
”.
Again, the plaintiff in response in cross-examination said that she
did not recall being told of pneumonia as a diagnosis.
To similar
effect, in relation to a doctor’s note on 29 November 2012 at
11h25 (at 006-46) that the “
parents
were counselled on condition and prognosis”
and a further doctor’s note on 6 December 2012 that “
mother
counselled about the condition”
(at 006-35).
37.
Although the plaintiff testified that after
her daughter was discharged that she was referred to a cerebral palsy
clinic, she testified
that there were no subsequent problems with her
baby in relation to pneumonia. In response to this in
cross-examination the plaintiff
was challenged with a subsequent
radiologist report of 28 September 2013, i.e. some 10 months
later where it appears that
the baby had been taken to radiologists
who concluded that “
findings are
in keeping with broncho pneumonia
”
(Caselines 006-9). The plaintiff testified that she did not remember
her baby coughing in August 2013, but she did remember
that her baby
“could not suck” and was having difficulty feeding and
that her mother (the plaintiff’s mother),
who was assisting her
in looking after the baby, may have arranged for this consultation.
The plaintiff was challenged that this
demonstrated her baby was sick
(because of pneumonia) and that her previous statement that the baby
was not sick was incorrect.
38.
Much of the cross-examination was directed,
it would appear to me, to challenge the credibility of the plaintiff
as a witness in
that her version was vague and was inconsistent with
the medical records.
39.
It is so that the plaintiff’s
evidence was unclear in various respects, but this can be justifiably
ascribed to the events
going back nearly ten years and to what was
undoubtedly a traumatic experience. I do not find that I can make a
finding that the
plaintiff was dishonest and that her evidence should
be rejected. But it was unsatisfactory in its vagueness and the
witness’
oft recourse to saying that “
she
could not remember
” or being
unable to remember when pressed.
40.
The
appropriate approach is that identified in
Gestmin
SGPS S.A. v Credit Suisse (UK) Limited and Credit Suisse Securities
(Europe) Limited
,
[3]
an English decision of the High Court of Justice Queen's Bench
Division Commercial Court, in which Leggatt J considered the
difficulties encountered with evidence based on a witness'
recollection of events, and the unreliability of human memory. Legatt
J held, in this regard,
[4]
that:
"The process of civil litigation
itself subjects the memories of witnesses to powerful biases. The
nature of litigation is
such that witnesses often have a stake in a
particular version of events. This is obvious where the witness is a
party or has a
tie of loyalty (such as an employment relationship) to
a party to the proceedings. Other, more subtle influences include
allegiances
created by the process of preparing a witness statement
and of coming to court to give evidence for one side in the dispute.
A
desire to assist, or at least not to prejudice, the party who has
called the witness or that party's lawyers, as well as a natural
desire to give a good impression in a public forum, can be
significant motivating forces.”
41.
Leggatt
J considered the process of preparation for trial and its impact on
human memory. He concluded:
[5]
"In
the light of these considerations, the best approach for a judge to
adopt in the trial of a commercial case
[6]
is, in my view, to place little if any reliance at all on witnesses'
recollections of what was said in meetings and conversations,
and to
base factual findings on inferences drawn from the documentary
evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean
that oral
testimony serves no useful purpose - though its utility is often
disproportionate to its length. But its value lies largely,
as I see
it, in the opportunity which cross-examination affords to subject the
documentary record to critical scrutiny and to gauge
the personality,
motivations and working practices of a witness, rather than in
testimony of what the witness recalls of particular
conversations and
events. Above all, it is important to avoid the fallacy of supposing
that, because a witness has confidence in
his or her recollection and
is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides any reliable
guide to the truth”.
42.
It may be that I would have to place more
reliance upon the contemporaneous medical and other records, allowing
for what appears
to be the common cause deficiency of those records
(an aspect that I deal with in more detail later in this judgment),
than on
the plaintiff’s version.
THE
EXPERT WITNESSES AND THE MEDICAL RECORDS
43.
The plaintiff called the following expert
witnesses:
43.1.
Prof Smith (neonatologist);
43.2.
Dr Hofmeyr (specialist obstetrician /
gynaecologist);
43.3.
Dr Gericke (specialist paediatrician /
geneticist);
43.4.
Prof Andronikou (radiologist); and
43.5.
Professor Nolte (nursing specialist).
44.
The defendant called two expert witnesses:
44.1.
Prof Cooper (neonatologist); and
44.2.
Dr Marishane (specialist obstetrician /
gynaecologist).
45.
Joint minutes were prepared as between the
respective experts, i.e. as between:
45.1.
the neonatologists, Prof Smith and his
counterpart Prof Cooper;
45.2.
the specialist obstetricians /
gynaecologists, Dr Hofmeyr and her counterpart Dr Marishane;
45.3.
the radiologists, Prof Andronikou and his
counterpart Dr Weinstein;
45.4.
Dr Gericke (specialist paediatrician /
geneticist) and Prof Bolton (specialist paediatrician);
45.5.
the nursing specialists, Prof Nolte and his
counterpart Dr Du Plessis; and
45.6.
the paediatric neurologists, Prof Solomons
for the plaintiff and Dr Mogashoa for the defendant.
46.
A comparison of the experts who prepared
joint minutes (following upon their expert summaries) with the
experts who testified in
the trial shows that neither of the
paediatric neurologists for the parties testified nor did any of the
defendant’s experts
other than Prof Cooper and Dr Marishane.
47.
Certain agreed issues between the
respective experts had been recorded in some of the joint minutes, as
well as in certain instances
their disagreements. This is
particularly so in respect of the joint minutes of Professors Smith
and Cooper, of Prof Solomon and
Dr Mogashoa and of Prof Andronikou
and Dr Weinstein. In other instances, the joint minutes were
less useful, in some instances
being little more than excerpts from
the respective experts’ reports and in other instances no more
than recordals of what
had been stated in medical records, without
what appears to be any meaningful engagement between the experts on
the issues.
48.
Before
the commencement of the trial, the defendant was invited by the
plaintiff to accept the agreements concluded between the
opposing
experts, as envisaged in the judgment of
Bee
v
Road
Accident Fund
2018
(4) SA 366 (SCA).
[7]
Where the
parties engage experts who investigate the facts, and where those
experts meet and agree upon those facts, a litigant
may not repudiate
that agreement “
unless
it does so clearly and, at the very latest, at the outset of the
trial”
.
[8]
49.
The defendant’s response to this
invitation as recorded in the most recent joint practice note was
“
[t]he Defendant does not
repudiate the agreements reached by the experts but, the Plaintiff
still has to prove the foundational
facts and the basis of opinions
expressed by the expert”
.
50.
I am not certain as what this response is
intended to convey but as it transpired during the trial, no attempts
were made by either
of the parties to repudiate or move from the
agreements as were recorded in the joint minutes (save for the
plaintiff in one respect,
as appears below).
51.
The
plaintiff sought shortly before the commencement of the trial before
me to deliver a supplementary summary by her paediatric
neurologist,
Prof Solomons, to which the defendant objected on the basis that it
was late and prejudicial. In light of the objection,
the plaintiff
elected to abandon reliance on that supplementary report. What the
plaintiff did do instead was to place on record
that whereas
previously its expert, Prof Solomons, had disagreed with certain
views that had been expressed by his counterpart,
Dr Mogashoa, and as
recorded in paragraphs 6 and 7 of their joint minute, Prof Solomons
was now in agreement with those views,
save in a minor respect.
[9]
Previously contested evidence now was uncontested.
52.
Prof Solomons had previously expressed his
expert view that an HII had only occurred intrapartum and that
postnatal HII was excluded.
The change brought about by the
concessions made on record in relation to the opinion of Dr Mogashoa
was that now the plaintiff
accepted that in addition to her
contention that there was intrapartum HII, that there were also two
subsequent episodes of hypoxia,
particularly in the NICU. The
defendant persisted that the only HIIs were postnatal.
53.
This shift in the plaintiff’s case
from her pleaded case of an intrapartum HII towards embracing a case
based upon the common
cause HII that took place postpartum in the
NICU would be of significance, as will be seen later in this
judgment.
54.
As
a matter of terminology, I was informed by counsel, a distinction
needs to be drawn between an “
insult
”
and an “
injury
”.
An injury may result from an insult, but an insult will not
necessarily give rise to an injury.
[10]
Therefore, the defendant contends, that although there may have been
both intrapartum and postpartum insults, those insults did
not result
in injury (and more particularly brain-damaging injury), until the
sentinel event that occurred in the NICU on 28 November
2012 around
19h00. On the other hand, as the plaintiff’s case developed,
she contended that there were brain-damaging injuries
(and not just
insults) both before and after birth.
55.
As stated, only one factual witness was
led, namely the plaintiff herself. While some of the expert evidence
was based upon her
factual evidence, particularly her case history as
conveyed to the experts, most of the expert evidence was expression
of opinion
based upon what was recorded in the medical records,
predominantly a series of what was intended to be contemporaneous
notes made
by the medical personnel at the hospital who attended upon
the plaintiff and her new-born child, particularly the attending
doctors
and nurses.
56.
The doctors’ and nurses’
contemporaneous progress notes were extensively referred to by the
experts in their testimony.
It appears that these notes are
contemporaneous in the loose sense that they were made more or less
around the recorded times in
the notes but self-evidently what is
described as having occurred at a specific time relates to a period
more or less around the
recorded time, as many of the notes are, for
example, at half-hourly increments.
57.
Early in the trial I enquired whether
further factual witnesses would be led, envisaging that one or other
of the parties would
call the medical personnel who actually attended
upon the plaintiff at the clinic and then upon the plaintiff and her
baby at the
hospital, during both the intrapartum and postpartum
periods, and who had made the contemporaneous notes. As stated above,
the
defendant had recorded that it still required the foundational
facts upon which the plaintiff’s experts relied to be proven.
58.
These nurses and doctors’ notes on
which much reliance would be placed by the experts in expressing
their opinions identified
the authors of those notes, such as the
attending doctors.
59.
In response to my query, I was informed by
counsel that no further factual witnesses would be called, including
any of the attending
doctors or nurses.
60.
Ordinarily,
the litigants’ legal teams will have engaged with each other
during trial preparation to consider and reach agreement
on what is
colloquially described as the status of the documents, dealing with
such issues as authenticity of the documents
[11]
and generally the status of those documents for purposes of the
trial. I therefore raised with the parties at the commencement
of the
trial what the status of the medical records was, especially the
doctors’ and nurses’ notes given that these
doctors and
nurses as the authors of their manuscript notes would not be called.
As it did not appear that the parties had engaged
with each other
squarely on this issue, I at their counsels’ request stood down
the matter to enable them to engage on the
issue.
61.
The
parties then agreed as follows in relation to the status of the
hospital, medical and related documents, which I set out
verbatim:
[12]
61.1.
the documents are what they purport to be
and that it is not necessary that the content of the entries in the
documents must be
confirmed in evidence by the authors of the
entries;
61.2.
the authenticity of the documentation is
accepted, and copies thereof can be used in court;
61.3.
the experts employed by both the parties
will be at liberty to express their opinions in evidence, as set out
in their respective
reports and joint minutes, regarding the
interpretation of the contemporaneous notes contained in the said
documents.
62.
The following features of this
agreement between the parties are notable:
62.1.
the
parties accept the documents for what they are and in particular do
not dispute the authenticity of the documents. This distinguishes
the
status of these documents from, for example, those in the Supreme
Court of Appeal decision of
AM
obo KM v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape
[13]
to which the defendant’s counsel referred, where in that matter
the documents had been falsified in certain respects and
where
certain objections had been pertinently made to the correctness and
authenticity of those records;
62.2.
the parties have agreed to admit what is
effectively hearsay evidence. This is clear from their agreement that
“
it is not necessary that the
contents of the entries in the documents must be confirmed in
evidence by the authors of the entries”
.
This is reinforced by their recordal that the experts would be
permitted to express their opinions regarding the interpretation
of
the contemporaneous notes contained in the documents.
63.
The
medical records, and especially the contemporaneous notes by the
medical personnel who are not called to testify, would constitute
hearsay evidence and would ordinarily be inadmissible as the
probative value of that evidence depends upon the credibility of a
person other than the person giving such evidence. In this instance,
the probative value would be dependent upon the authors of
the notes,
who would not be called.
[14]
64.
The parties may to agree to admit what
would otherwise be inadmissible hearsay evidence.
Section 3(1)(a)
of
the
Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45 of 1988
provides as an
exception to the inadmissibility of hearsay evidence where “
each
party against whom the evidence is to be adduced agrees to admission
thereof as evidence at such proceedings”
.
65.
Apart from the parties having formally
agreed on the admissibility of hearsay evidence, neither party during
the course of the trial
raised any concern that much of the evidence
upon which their experts relied in expressing their opinions was
hearsay evidence.
66.
While the parties’ agreement to admit
otherwise inadmissible hearsay evidence addresses the admissibility
of that evidence,
the separate issue of the probative value of that
evidence remains. As will appear below, in several instances there
was a lively
debate between the respective experts pertaining to what
was to be made of what the author of a particular contemporaneous
note
intended to convey. To put it simply, experts were offering
differing views as to what they thought another person had meant when
that other person had written a particular note. It is self-evident
that the probative value of evidence led by an expert as to
what
another person (who in their own right were probably also experts)
may have meant when he/she recorded something is questionable.
67.
On the other hand, many of the entries in
the medical records were uncontentious, such as the recordal of
various medical test results
and so the experts readily accepted the
correctness of those entries and then proffered their experts’
views on what was
to be made of those uncontentious entries.
68.
I do not propose dealing in detail with the
evidence of the experts but shall rather refer to such evidence as is
necessary for
purposes of this judgment.
69.
Where
I refer to the views expressed by the experts in their expert reports
and/or joint minutes, this is not to be taken as being
a reference
exclusively to that report and/or joint minute (i.e. to the document)
as the source of the evidence). The experts who
testified did confirm
under oath their reports and joint minutes, save where they otherwise
indicated. In other instances, I have
had regard to the agreements
reached by the experts in their joint minute.
[15]
70.
I shall deal first with the hypoxic
ischaemic injuries (the HII) that that took place postpartum in the
NICU as those, in my view,
are determinative of the defendant’s
liability.
THE
POSTNATAL HYPOXIC ISCHAEMIC EVENTS IN THE NICU
71.
Following
the minor child’s birth on 28 November 2012 at 11h10, she was
admitted to the ward,
[16]
having
inter
alia
low Apgar scores.
72.
At
13h00, while in the ward, the minor child, having been diagnosed at
that stage with birth asphyxia
[17]
and aspiration pneumonia, was “
still
quite distressed”
.
[18]
The attending doctor’s note records that there was no bed
available “
at
the moment”
in the NICU but a baby in the NICU was to be extubated, i.e. a bed in
the NICU would soon become available.
73.
The
nursing notes for 13h30 record
inter
alia
that the minor child’s condition continued to be distressed
(skin colour cyanosed, floppy, foaming and nose flaring), that
urgent
chest x-rays were needed and if there was no improvement the baby was
to be transferred to the NICU.
[19]
74.
The
attending doctor’s note for 14h00 records a still distressed
baby, who was “
still
gasping
”
and had desaturated in oxygen levels to less than 70%.
[20]
The baby was “
manually
bagged with Neopuff
”,
which was explained in evidence as a form of manually assisted
breathing. Notably there is a recordal of “
thick
pussy secretions
”,
which Prof Cooper for the defendant would opine is consistent only
with infection. The baby is also recorded as being intubated
[21]
by the attending doctor. A continuation of the note
[22]
records that there are “
thick
and mucoid
[mucus-containing]
bloodstained
”
secretions, and there appears to be a suggestion of “
aspirated
liquor
”.
75.
By
14h30 it appears from the notes that the minor child had not improved
as she was transferred from the ward to the NICU and placed
upon
mechanical ventilation. Chest X-rays were taken.
[23]
At that stage, the attending doctor’s diagnosis remained birth
asphyxia and “
aspiration
pneumonia”
.
[24]
76.
By
15h00 the attending doctor had evidently examined the X-rays as he
recorded in his notes that they showed “
severe
changes and hyperinflation
”.
[25]
His note continues “
NB
mother has been explained about severe pneumonia / Birth asphyxia”
.
77.
This diagnosis
requires some elaboration.
78.
The
plaintiff’s contention is that the minor child’s
condition was caused by birth asphyxia, more particularly from
hypoxia (inadequate oxygen to the brain) caused by prolonged labour.
This birth asphyxia was, according to the plaintiff, of such
a
severity as to result in a hypoxic ischaemic injury (HII) sufficient
to result in the condition, in contrast to a hypoxic ischaemic
insult
that may not have brain-damaging consequences.
79.
The plaintiff
contends that by the time the minor child was admitted to the NICU
she had already suffered an HII of sufficient severity
to have
resulted in irreversible brain damage (and the condition as
described). The plaintiff contends that this HII had taken
place
already during labour (intrapartum).
80.
The
defendant’s case was that although the minor child may have
suffered from a hypoxic ischaemic insult (in contrast to a
hypoxic
ischaemic injury) during labour, that insult may at most may have
resulted in ‘
some’
damage but
not sufficient to have caused a hypoxic ischaemic injury of
sufficient severity to result in the condition.
81.
The
defendant further disputed that any hypoxic damage to the foetus had
been caused by prolonged birth (and so disputed that there
had been
birth asphyxia insofar as that is intended to be a reference to birth
asphyxia caused by prolonged birth
[26]
)
but that if there was such damage it had been caused by congenital
pneumonia (i.e., pneumonia contracted by the foetus
in
utero
from the mother). The defendant’s argument continued that its
medical personnel could not be found negligent in relation
to damage
caused by congenital pneumonia as that damage was not preventable.
82.
It is
therefore not surprising that much was made in the experts’
evidence of this recorded diagnosis by the attending doctor,
at that
stage, at 15h00, of “
severe
pneumonia / Birth asphyxia”
.
83.
It
was understood by the experts that it was around that point that the
attending doctor, in addition to birth asphyxia, diagnosed
congenital
pneumonia, in contrast to his earlier diagnosis recorded in his
notes
[27]
of aspirant
pneumonia.
[28]
84.
The approach
taken by the plaintiff was to dispute the attending doctor’s
diagnosis of severe congenital pneumonia, asserting
through her
experts both in their expert summaries and joint minutes, and during
the trial that it was a misdiagnosis.
85.
The
defendant on the other hand advanced the case that the attending
doctor’s diagnosis of congenital pneumonia was correct,
and
that this inflammatory disease of the lungs was to blame for the
hypoxic injury to the minor child, and that its medical personnel
could not be blamed for damage caused by the disease.
[29]
86.
I am therefore
required to decide on the probabilities whether the diagnosis of
congenital pneumonia was correct, insofar as it
is relevant to the
issue of liability.
87.
The
experts appear agreed that the attending doctor in recording his
diagnosis had done so having had examined the minor child’s
chest x-rays, as recorded in the note of 15h00. The experts disputed
whether the attending doctor had correctly interpreted those
x-rays,
and particularly whether those x-rays supported a diagnosis of
congenital pneumonia. Prof Smith for the plaintiff testified
that the
attending doctor had misinterpreted the x-rays and so had
misdiagnosed congenital pneumonia. Prof Cooper for the defendant
disagreed that the attending doctor had misdiagnosed.
[30]
88.
Useful would
have been the expert witnesses, particularly the radiologists,
expressing their expert opinions on the x-rays. But
the x-rays were
not adduced into evidence, without any real explanation given for
their absence. The attending doctor, although
readily identifiable,
was not called to give evidence on the issue. Instead the expert
witnesses Prof Smith for the plaintiff and
Prof Cooper for the
defendant were left to testify as to what the attending doctor may
have meant when he recorded that the x-rays
showed “
severe
changes and hyperinflation”
.
89.
Prof Smith for
the plaintiff in his testimony expressed uncertainty as to what the
attending doctor meant when he recorded “
severe
changes
”.
In contrast, Prof Cooper testified that healthy lungs would show
black on x-rays in contrast to diseased or compromised
lungs that
would show white streaks on x-rays, and so that what the attending
doctor meant when he recorded “severe changes”
was
changes from black to white, consistent with lung infection.
90.
Prof Cooper
explained that meconium is essentially dark fecal material produced
by the foetus before birth, which can find
its way into the amniotic
fluid, and that this can be inhaled (aspirated) by the baby around
the time of delivery. This could then
cause aspirant pneumonia, and
which would show on chest x-rays. As described above, until that
stage the attending doctor’s
diagnosis had been that of
aspirant pneumonia, along with birth asphyxia.
91.
But,
Prof Cooper testified, as there was no evidence of
meconium-stained secretions, meconium aspiration (i.e. aspiration
pneumonia) could not have been the cause of the whitened lungs
reflected on the x-rays. And so Prof Cooper concluded that in his
expert opinion that “
severe
lower respiratory tract infection (pneumonia) is the only credible
diagnosis
”,
that is a diagnosis of congenital pneumonia.
92.
This
opinion of Prof Cooper is recorded several times in the joint minute
of Profs Smith and Cooper,
[31]
disagreeing with Prof Smith’s opinion that the attending
doctor’s narration of “
severe
changes and hyperinflation”
was “
a
picture unlike that seen with pneumonia and more likely to be found
with aspiration and air-trapping and/or with the application
of
excessive levels of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP, set on a
ventilator”)
.
[32]
93.
Prof Cooper
then continued to explain that the attending doctor’s
observation of hyperinflation of the lungs is noteworthy.
Prof Cooper
explained that hyperinflation is effectively an over-inflation of the
lungs, which is typically caused by the oxygen
being pumped into the
baby’s lungs mechanically, and the secretions caused by the
pneumonia infection then preventing efficient
exhalation, resulting
in over-inflation. Prof Cooper therefore opined that this is
consistent with a diagnosis of pneumonia.
94.
Prof
Cooper further testified that in his view this also demonstrated that
the attending doctor had significant experience in interpreting
x-rays as it took considerable experience to be able to detect
hyperinflation, and so credence must be given to that doctor’s
diagnosis. This, Prof Cooper reasoned, countered Prof Smith’s
opinion that the attending doctor may have misinterpreted the
x-rays
as being indicative of congenital pneumonia.
[33]
95.
Prof
Smith proffered his expert view that a misdiagnosis of pneumonia in
newborns is not unusual as there were studies evidencing
the probable
over-diagnosis of neonatal pneumonia.
[34]
While Prof Cooper agreed that congenital pneumonia may be
over-diagnosed, he stood firm that in the absence of meconium-stained
liquor, if severe changes are seen on a chest x-ray in a term infant
severe pneumonia is the only credible diagnosis.
[35]
96.
A difficulty
is that two experts (Professors Smith and Cooper) are disagreeing on
what to make of another person’s recordal
(the attending
doctor’s recordal) of what that other person observed and
concluded when examining the x-rays. The probative
value of this
evidence is dependent upon the credibility of the attending doctor.
The hearsay nature of this evidence is plainly
evident. Although the
parties have agreed to admit hearsay evidence, and have expressly
agreed that both parties are at liberty
to express their opinions in
evidence regarding their interpretation of the contemporaneous notes
of the doctors and nurses, this
kind of evidence has limited
probative value in enabling a court to reach a finding,
97.
Nonetheless
this is part of the playing field upon which the parties have
deliberately chosen to litigate their dispute, as appears
from their
recordal as to the status of the contemporaneous notes, and so I take
account of this evidence in assessing where the
probabilities lie.
98.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in the oft-cited
Michael
and another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and another
2001 (3) SA 1188
(SCA) cautioned
[36]
that a court is not to decide a case by simply expressing a
preference for a particular expert’s view where there are
conflicting
views on either side, both capable of logical support.
Rather the opinions should be assessed as to whether they are founded
on
logical reasoning,
[37]
and
then for the court to make a finding, on a review of all of the
evidence, where the balance of probabilities lie.
[38]
99.
Making
allowance for the hearsay nature of the evidence and its limited
probative value, I find the reasoning of Prof Cooper on
this issue
more persuasive. His explanation was more thorough than that of Prof
Smith, such as accounting for the exclusion of
aspirant pneumonia
because of the absence of meconium-stained liquor. Ultimately from
the evidence led in the trial there was no
dispute that there was an
absence of meconium-stained liquor,
[39]
although the experts differed on what to make of that.
100.
Further,
as already described, Prof Smith reasoned that what was described by
the attending doctor was “
more
likely to be found with aspiration and air-trapping and/or with the
application of excessive levels of positive end-expiratory
pressure
(PEEP), set on a ventilator”. “
Air-trapping”
is nonetheless consistent with a diagnosis of pneumonia, for the
reasons described by Prof Cooper as to how
pneumonia can cause
over-inflation by compromising exhalation following mechanical
pumping of air into the baby’s lungs.
There is evidence of
mechanical pumping of air preceding the taking of the x-rays, as
appears from the attending doctor’s
note at 14h00 that there
was manual pumping with a Neopuff before admission to the NICU.
[40]
In contrast, the over-ventilation described by Prof Smith as the
result of settings on a ventilator (Prof Smith expressly refers
to a
ventilator) could only have occurred once the baby was placed on the
ventilator in the NICU, which was only at 14h30 when
it appears that
the x-rays were taken. On the probabilities, it is more likely that
the hyperinflation was caused at an earlier
stage, such as in the
manner described by Prof Cooper.
101.
This
diagnosis of congenital pneumonia from the x-rays is supported by
further evidence. The common cause evidence is that from
birth the
medical personnel observed thick pussy, mucoid (i.e. containing
mucus) bloodstained secretions.
[41]
I have already referred to the attending doctor’s notes
recording this following the admission of the minor child to the
ward.
102.
The
defendant’s experts testified that this was indicative of
congenital pneumonia. Prof Cooper was emphatic in this evidence
that
pussy secretions can only be caused by infection, in this instance
congenital pneumonia.
103.
Prof
Smith’s opinion was that the excessive lung secretions were
indicative of moderate to moderate-severe asphyxia where
the
autonomic nervous system had been affected by hypoxia and that the
bloodstaining of the secretions is explained by “
left
ventricular dysfunction causing lung odema”
.
[42]
Prof Smith continued that “
the
recording of copious creamy, blood-stained and/or mucoid secretions”
was consistent with autonomic nervous system (dis)function and “
not
necessarily in keeping with secretions relating to possible
pneumonia
”
[43]
.
104.
Prof Cooper
strongly disagreed in his expert view, opining that had there already
been moderate to moderate-severe asphyxia where
the autonomic nervous
system was affected by hypoxia and with lung oedema, as opined by
Prof Smith, this would have caused secretions
that would have been
clear and watery, and not thick, mucoid and bloodstained.
105.
I find Prof
Cooper’s reasoning more persuasive, especially that the
presence of pus in the secretions as demonstrative of
infection, in
this instance congenital pneumonia. Prof Cooper’s reasoning
accounts for the multiple narrations on the notes
of thick, mucoid
and bloodstained in a persuasive manner with reference to pus-causing
infection. In contrast, Prof Smith’s
explanation is more in the
nature of seeking to “explain away” the mucoid secretions
by a hypothesis of what might,
rather than what probably did, have
caused them.
106.
The plaintiff
argued, and reasoned, that because the plaintiff as the mother had
displayed no symptoms of being infected with pneumonia,
both before
and after the birth, that she was not suffering from pneumonia and so
could not pass on congenital pneumonia infection
to her baby. The
defendant’s experts on the other hand point out that it is not
at all unusual for a mother to be asymptomatic,
i.e. not show any
signs of pneumonia yet still have pneumonia and then transmit that
infection to the foetus. Prof Cooper referred
to an American study in
Dallas where up to 43% of babies diagnosed with congenital pneumonia
in a test case had mothers who were
asymptomatic. In my view the
absence of any symptoms in the mother is not in and of itself
sufficient to outweigh the other evidence
that is indicative of the
baby having congenital pneumonia.
107.
The
plaintiff’s experts, especially Prof Smith, proffered views as
to why each of the indications of pneumonia may be explained
by
something other than pneumonia (for example, that the thick mucoid
bloodstained secretions were caused by a compromised autonomic
nervous system brought about by hypoxia and lung oedema, and that the
X-rays may have been misdiagnosed as pneumonia). I prefer,
where the
test to be applied is that of the balance of probabilities, the line
of reasoning that where multiple indications points
to a particular
outcome (in this instance congenital pneumonia), that such outcome
has been established on the probabilities, rather
than finding that
because each indication can be explained away when viewed
individually, this precludes the finding of the outcome
to which
those factors point cumulatively. But even if the approach is adopted
that the indications can also support, when considered
cumulatively,
a diagnosis of birth asphyxia caused by prolonged labour, I find, for
the reasons set out above, the evidence of
Prof Cooper to be more
persuasive on this point, and that the indications, on the
probabilities, are more consistent with a diagnosis
of congenital
pneumonia, than not.
108.
Therefore, on
a balance of probabilities, I find that the diagnosis of congenital
pneumonia is established.
109.
Returning to
the chronology established by the attending doctor’s notes, his
note of 15h00 goes on to record improved levels
of oxygen saturation
at 93%, which I understand from the evidence not overly concerning.
110.
After
this entry by the attending doctor at 15h00, there is no other entry,
whether in the nurses’ notes or the doctors’
notes for a
period of some three hours. The next entry by a nurse is at 18h00
[44]
and by the attending doctor at 18h30.
[45]
111.
Prof Smith
explained that it is not unusual for the attending doctor not to have
made more frequent notes because an attending doctor
would not
necessarily make notes on an hourly or more frequent basis as he may
be attending to as many as eight patients and so
absent a noteworthy
incident, might only make a note some three or four times in a
24-hour period. This can be contrasted to the
nurses, where close
monitoring of the baby is required in an intensive care unit.
112.
Prof Cooper
accepted that close monitoring by nurses was required in the NICU.
Prof Cooper continued though that the absence
of any note by the
nurses in the nursing notes was not necessarily indicative of a
failure to closely monitor the baby. This is
because in an intensive
care unit there were other records available, such as the ICU charts
which would record various measurements
and the like on an hourly, if
not more frequent basis. But those charts are missing and so there is
no recorded evidence whether
or not there was close monitoring of the
baby over that 3-hour period by the nursing staff.
113.
While
it is so that the absence of records or even of inadequate
note-taking does not demonstrate that the baby herself was not
adequately monitored (save insofar as adequate note-taking or
record-keeping itself is considered as part of adequate monitoring),
it is also not proof that there was close monitoring. Given the
statutory obligation of the defendant to ensure there was proper
retention of the medical records,
[46]
this deficiency in documentation and record-keeping cannot redound to
the detriment of the plaintiff when making a legal (as contrasted
to
a strictly logical) assessment on the probabilities. This is
especially so where no explanation was proffered, such as by a
factual witness, of what became of the documents. It cannot be in the
interests of justice to reason that a plaintiff is unable
to
discharge the onus of proof on a particular issue such as negligence
because no one knows whether the missing documents that
the defendant
was obliged to maintain may exonerate the defendant from
negligence.
[47]
It may also be
that depending on the circumstance an adverse inference is to be
drawn against the party that should have but did
not adduce the
documents, namely that the documents if produced would have supported
the adversary’s position.
[48]
114.
To
continue with the narrative, the attending doctor’s note at
18h30
[49]
reads “
restless
child. Pulled out tube. Full of clots. Desaturation to 70.
Reintubated with [illegible] 3.5
”.
The note continues, including with what appears to be a request for
repeat X-rays.
115.
The
nurse’s earlier note marked 18h00
[50]
confirms that “
baby
extubate[d] herself
”
and that the attending doctor was called immediately, and whereafter
the baby was re-intubated.
116.
It is unclear
upon a reading of both the doctor’s and nurse’s note
precisely when the baby extubated, i.e. when she
“
pulled
out [her] tube
”.
But what can be gathered from a reading of the notes together is that
the extubation had occurred by at least 18h30, and
probably at some
point after 18h00.
117.
When Prof
Cooper was pressed whether it could be ascertained from the notes how
the long the baby had been extubated before it was
discovered, he
agreed that this could not be ascertained from the notes. He however
opined that this could not have been for too
long because the
saturation levels immediately after the baby was reintubated at 18h30
were at 70, which although low, were not
such as to cause brain
damage and that this demonstrated that the baby could not have been
extubated for too long.
118.
Although the
plaintiff’s counsel contend in their heads of argument that
this extubation was a hypoxic ischaemic injury of
its own, I do not
find that on the available evidence that this incident of
self-extubation is a self-standing and independent
cause of hypoxia
sufficient to cause the condition.
119.
What was
common cause between the parties in relation to this narrated
self-extubation is that the tube had become blocked through
thick
blood-clotted secretions, which had caused the baby to struggle to
breathe and that in her resultant restless movements she
ended up
“
pulling
out
”
the tube. This then raises the question that but for the baby’s
struggles to breathe, and so stay alive, whether any
medical
personnel would have noticed her struggles.
120.
The defendant
proffers the thesis that the absence of any notes for the three-hour
period from 15h00 to 18h00 does not prove that
there had not been
close monitoring of the baby in the NICU and that it may be that it
was because of that close monitoring the
nurses noticed that the baby
had extubated, and so could take urgent steps to re-intubate the baby
by calling for the attending
doctor to do so.
121.
The
plaintiff’s thesis on the other hand is that if it had not been
for the baby’s struggles to breathe and stay alive,
her
breathing difficulties and more particularly the blocked tube would
have gone unnoticed.
122.
I will return
to these competing theses shortly.
123.
I
move on to what the parties accepted was a sentinel (catastrophic)
event at 19h00. The attending doctor’s notes
[51]
showed that he was called to the NICU as saturation levels had fallen
below 70 and, importantly, there had been a bradycardia and
a need
for cardiac massage.
124.
The parties
were agreed that this was a sentinel (or catastrophic) event. It is
this sentinel event that the defendant asserts was
a hypoxic
ischaemic event of sufficient severity to cause the “acute
profound” HII reflected on the MRI scans and to
result in the
brain-damaging condition. The defendant’s case is that this is
the condition-causing injury, and it cannot
be held responsible for
that injury.
125.
The attending
doctor’s notes at 19h30 continue that the endotracheal tube
remained in place but there was no air entry and
no chest movement
with bagging. The tube was then removed and found to be blocked with
thick secretions. The baby was then re-intubated,
presumably the tube
having been cleared or replaced.
126.
It appears
from the notes that it was these recorded thick secretions that had
blocked the endotracheal tube, which prevented the
baby from
receiving oxygen and which resulted in the bradycardia and, on the
defendant’s version, the brain-damaging HII.
127.
The
plaintiff’s case, at least by the time the trial commenced and
as became more evident as the trial progressed –
about which I
say more later – was that this blockage of the endotracheal
tube by secretions while the baby was in the NUCI
– was caused
by the medical personnel’s wrongful conduct in failing to take
adequate steps to prevent (or mitigate)
the risk of the blockage
where they had been forewarned since the baby’s birth that the
baby was expelling thick secretions,
and so much so that the baby had
self-extubated some 30 to 60 minutes earlier (somewhere between 18h00
and 18h30) because of thick
secretions blocking the endotracheal
tube.
128.
On the
defendant’s version, it is the blocked endotracheal tube
incident that caused the injury that led to the condition.
The
defendant disavows that its negligence caused the blocked tube.
129.
Cameron
J in
Oppelt
v Department of Health, Western Cape
2016
(1) SA 325 (CC)
[52]
reiterated
that the long-standing test for negligence continues to apply in the
field of medical negligence:
“
[106]
In our
law Kruger
[53]
embodies the classic test. There are two steps. The first is
foreseeability — would a reasonable person in the position of
the defendant foresee the reasonable possibility of injuring another
and causing loss? The second is preventability — would
that
person take reasonable steps to guard against the injury
happening?
[107]
The key point
is that negligence must be evaluated in light of all
the
circumstances. And, because the test is defendant-specific ('in the
position of the defendant'), the standard is upgraded for
medical professionals. The question, for them, is whether a
reasonable medical professional would have foreseen the damage
and
taken steps to avoid it. In Mitchell v Dixon
[54]
the
then Appellate Division noted that this standard does not expect the
impossible of medical personnel:
‘
A medical
practitioner is not expected to bring to bear upon the case entrusted
to him the highest possible degree of professional
skill, but he is
bound to employ reasonable skill and care; and he is liable for the
consequences if he does not.'
[108] This means
that we must not ask: what would exceptionally competent and
exceptionally knowledgeable doctors
have done? We must ask: 'what can
be expected of the ordinary or average doctor in view of the general
level of knowledge, ability,
experience, skill and diligence
possessed and exercised by the profession, bearing in mind that a
doctor is a human being and not
a machine and that no human being is
infallible'. Practically, we must also ask: was the medical
professional's approach consonant
with a reasonable and
responsible body of medical opinion? This test always depends on the
facts. With a medical specialist, the
standard is that of the
reasonable specialist.”
130.
The
classic
Kruger
v Coetzee
test is set out more fully set out in
Politis
NO v Member of the Executive Council for Health, Limpopo:
[55]
"[49]
... The test for negligence set out in Kruger v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
(A)
at
430E-G, could thus never be met. It reads as follows:
'For purposes of liability culpa
arises if –
(a) a
diligens paterfamilias in the position of the defendant –
(i) would foresee the reasonable
possibility of his conduct injuring another in his person or property
and causing him patrimonial
loss; and
(ii) would take reasonable steps to
guard against such occurrence; and
(b) the defendant
failed to take such steps.
This
has been constantly stated by this Court for some 50 years.
Requirement (a)(ii) is sometimes overlooked. Whether a diligens
paterfamilias in the position of the person concerned would take any
guarding steps at all and, if so, what steps would be reasonable,
must always depend on the particular circumstances of each case.
'"
131.
It would be
during the evidence-in-chief of the plaintiff’s expert
neonatologist Prof Smith, who was called as the plaintiff’s
second witness after the plaintiff herself had testified, that he
proffered his view towards the end of his examination in chief
that the blocked endotracheal tube was “
reasonably
preventable
”.
The defendant’s counsel did not raise any objection that this
proffered opinion in examination-in-chief may fall
outside the ambit
of his expert report and the neonatologists’ joint minute and
of what had been pleaded by the plaintiff.
Rather the defendant’s
counsel in cross-examination sought to explore this issue further and
elicited the following evidence
from Prof Smith.
132.
The question
was put to Prof Smith in cross-examination how he would have managed
the tube to prevent it from being blocked. Prof
Smith answered that
once the baby was intubated and the air humidified, an order should
have been issued by the attending doctor
to the nursing staff in the
NICU to regularly suction the tube. The frequency of such suctioning
is dependent upon the secretions.
The defendant’s counsel
continued to probe this issue in her cross-examination, eliciting the
evidence from Prof Smith that
in this instance given the history of
thick mucoid secretions that the suctioning protocol should have been
every 10 to 15 minutes,
at least from the time that the baby had
self-extubated at around 18h30. Prof Smith therefore under
cross-examination reaffirmed
his expert opinion given during
evidence-in-chief that the blockage of the tube was “
reasonably
predictable and reasonably preventable
”.
133.
The
defendant’s counsel continued to explore this issue when
leading her first witness, being the defendant’s expert
neonatologist, Prof Cooper. The question was put to Prof Cooper
whether the sentinel event that took place at 19h00 was preventable.
Prof Cooper explained that this was not preventable because the
endotracheal tube which is placed into the trachea can only go
down
so far into the respiratory system because if it goes too low it will
cause trauma to the soft tissue. Prof Cooper reasoned
that the
suction could not go down low enough to where the congenital
pneumonia had infected the cells which were causing the secretions.
If I understand this reasoning correctly, Prof Cooper is explaining
that suctioning of the secretions could not take place at source
but
only once the secretions had made their way up the respiratory system
to where the endotracheal tube could safely reach.
134.
Prof Cooper
was further asked by defendant’s counsel in
examination-in chief how often suctioning should take place.
He
answered that this depends on the secretions but if there are lots of
secretions, then every 10 to 15 minutes. In this respect
he agreed
with the evidence of Prof Smith that regular suctioning was required
every 10 to 15 minutes and that “
in
this matter, no question that the baby needed frequent suctioning
”.
135.
Prof Cooper
continued to reason in his examination-in-chief that the tube as
extubated at 18h30 was found to be blocked and then
again the tube
was found to be blocked at 19h00, when the sentinel event took place.
This accords with the attending doctor’s
notes. Prof Cooper
continued that during this half-an-hour period, using a suction
frequency of every 10 to 15 minutes, there should
have been at least
two additional episodes of suctioning of the tube to prevent
blockage.
136.
Prof Cooper
continued that all this would be doing is unblocking the endotracheal
tube, but the secretions would continue to come
from lower down in
the respiratory system where the pneumonia infection was, and that
this continuous upward movement of secretions
could not be prevented.
137.
Importantly,
Prof Cooper then continued that while nothing can be done about this
continued upward movement of secretions from source,
“
you
can only do something about this once in the tube
”.
138.
This
immediately begs the question how often was suctioning then done as
Prof Cooper agrees that this is something that could have
been done
to clear the tube and that it should be done every 10 to 15 minutes.
139.
Prof Cooper
stated that as the NICU charts were missing, it could not be
ascertained how often this suctioning had been done.
140.
Prof Cooper in
his reasoning in his evidence-in-chief then goes on to make the
following assumption:
“
I
am assuming that they
[the
nurses]
must
have been doing suction because firstly they know there were lots of
secretions and secondly as they just had had a major event”
.
141.
Prof Cooper
therefore continued that he “
refused
to accept that they were not suctioning the baby
”,
and that blocked tubes are a recognised event in NICU and the smaller
the tubes the more likely it will be blocked.
142.
But, as Prof
Cooper himself correctly characterises, this is an assumption. Prof
Cooper assumes that the nursing staff must have
been doing such
suctioning but there is no evidence that they actually did so.
Whether the medical personnel failed to do so, on
a balance of
probabilities, is a central issue to be decided in establishing
whether the defendant was negligent, and cannot simply
be answered by
an assumption in favour of the defendant.
143.
It is hardly
surprisingly that this issue as canvassed in examination-in-chief
would be taken up by the plaintiff’s counsel
in the
cross-examination of Prof Cooper. During cross-examination Prof
Cooper confirmed that there should have been at least two
episodes of
suctioning in the half-an-hour period between 18h30 when the
self-extubated tube was found to be blocked and the sentinel
event at
19h00. Prof Cooper persisted that he would be very surprised if it
did not happen as any reasonable nurse would be suctioning
as
required. Prof Cooper agreed that intensified monitoring was
required, and that very vigorous attention was necessary towards
unblocking the baby’s airway.
144.
Prof Cooper
testified in response to the question put to him whether he agreed
that if this was not done, this would show gross
substandard care,
that he did so agree, more particularly if the suctioning of the
endotracheal tube was not done.
145.
Prof Cooper
also agreed that since birth there was evidence of thick secretions,
and that suctioning was taking place to assist
the baby in her
breathing.
146.
Where Prof
Cooper did not agree with the propositions being put to him in
cross-examination was that he would not accept that the
nurses had
not undertaken that suctioning. But, as set out above, this is an
assumption.
147.
Applying the
classic
Kruger
v Coetzee
test, on the first leg I find that on the probabilities reasonable
medical personnel in the position of the attending doctor and
the
NICU nursing staff would have foreseen the reasonable possibility
that a failure to regularly suction the endotracheal tube
may lead to
a blocked tube, and so to the condition-causing HII.
148.
There
were warning signs from the minute the baby was born that she was
struggling and was in distress and required close monitoring.
[56]
Thick secretions were present from birth, and by 15h00 the attending
doctor had made a diagnosis of congenital pneumonia. The attending
doctor, and the nurses in the NICU, knew that the minor child was
suffering from congenital pneumonia (in addition to birth asphyxia)
and was expelling thick pussy secretions.
149.
It is clear
from the evidence that the baby was from the time of her first
difficult breath at 11h10 signalling her distress and
calling for
assistance. She persisted in signalling her distress for several
hours from 11h10 to 14h30 when she was admitted to
the NICU. Then
when again presenting with breathing difficulties caused by the
blocked tube, it was only her struggles that dislodged
the tube. By
that stage, it should have been plainly clear to the nursing staff
that the baby required close monitoring and tube-suctioning,
and that
should they not do so, the tube may be became blocked again with
thick secretions.
150.
In my view
there was more than a reasonable possibility that the tube may again
become blocked, and cause an HII. The self-extubation
incident of
less than 30 to 60 minutes earlier caused by just such a blocked tube
was a stark warning that this may happen.
151.
Turning to the
second leg of the
Kruger
v Coetzee
test, would reasonable medical personnel in the position of the
attending doctor and NICU nurses have taken steps to prevent, or
at
least reasonably guard against, the endotracheal tube becoming
blocked. This, in my view, has been satisfied on the probabilities.
152.
Prof Smith
testified that a suctioning protocol should have been issued, i.e.
that the attending doctor should have issued an instruction
to the
nursing staff in the NICU as to the frequency of the suctioning.
There is no evidence that such a protocol was issued, and
therefore
that the nurses were told that they needed to undertake such
suctioning. No issue of protocol is recorded in either the
attending
doctor’s or nurse’s notes, and neither the attending
doctor nor any other factual witness was called by the
defendant to
explain whether a protocol had been issued, and if so, why it had not
been recorded in the notes. It would have been
expected that the
issue of such a protocol would have been recorded both in the
doctor’s progress notes and the nursing progress
notes if it
had been issued.
153.
It may even be
that in the absence of the doctors having issued such a suction
protocol, the nurses may not have been aware that
they were to engage
in frequent suctioning of the baby’s endotracheal tube.
154.
But what is
clear is that both the neonatologists Professors Smith and Cooper
were agreed that the baby needed to be closely monitored,
particularly after the self-extubation incident, and that vigorous
suctioning was required at 10 to 15 minute intervals.
155.
It is in
relation to the third leg of the classic
Kruger
v Coetzee
test that the parties differed, namely whether the defendant’s
medical personnel took the reasonable steps of closely monitoring
the
baby, checking for a blocked endotracheal tube and undertaking
regular suctioning at 10 to 15 minutes, and especially in the
period
between the self-extubation incident and the sentinel event somewhere
between 30 to 60 minutes later.
156.
As I have
described above, Prof Cooper’s evidence was a resolute refusal
to accept that the nursing staff had not done this.
But a resolute
refusal to accept that the nurses had not done so is not evidence of
any probative value, assuming it is evidence
at all. Prof Cooper is
an expert witness called after the event – he is not a factual
witness who can testify first-hand
to what happened that day, and
during that period between 18h00 to 19h00, in the Tembisa Hospital.
It did not even appear from
his evidence that he could testify as to
what the position generally is in the NICU of the Tembisa Hospital.
157.
The defendant
did not call the factual witnesses who could have testified as to
what had happened in the NICU, and particularly
during the fateful
hour or so. This would have included the attending doctor and the
nurses on duty, although they were identifiable.
The defendant did
not give an explanation why those witnesses were not called, or even
whether they were unavailable.
158.
As
stated, there is no evidence that close monitoring of the baby took
place. An argument that the absence of medical records can
redound to
the benefit of the defendant because if those records were consulted
it may show that such accurate monitoring did take
place is in my
view to be rejected, for the reasons given by Spilg J in
Khoza
v MEC for Health
.
[57]
It may equally be that those missing records, if found, will prove
that there was no close monitoring. As already found, the rest
of the
evidence shows on the probabilities that there was a failure to
closely monitor the baby. The possibility that the missing
records
might show otherwise is not sufficient to counter the probabilities
going the other way.
159.
The
need for the defendant to call factual witnesses is even more acute
where there is a paucity of records, either because records
that were
kept have gone missing (such as NICU charts) or because of inadequate
record (note) taking. As Van der Linde J put it
in
Khoza:
[58]
“
I
do not see the distinction in principle between a case where a
defendant who is obliged to do so, discovers hospital records,
comprehensive and complete as it happens, fully to tell what had
occurred while the patient was un
der
its
care, and the case where a defendant discovers hospital records,
completely lacking in any rele
van
t
respect, completely obscuring what had occurred while the patient was
un
der
its
care. In the former case, the plaintiff is able properly and fully to
instruct his or her experts; in the latter case
not so. How can it be
that the defendant who fails to comply with accepted standards of
record-keeping, is allowed to benefit from
its own remissness by
declining to call viva voce evidence to supplement the inadequate
record?”
160.
Just
as Van der Linde J could not in
Khoza
,
[59]
I cannot avoid the words of
Lord
Justice
Brooke
[60]
, quoted by Ponnan
JA in
Goliath
v Member for the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape
2015 (2) SA 97 (SCA):
[61]
"It is likely to be a
very
rare medical negligence case
in
which the defendants take the risk of calling no factual evidence,
when such evidence is available to them, of the circumstances
surrounding a procedure which led to an unexpected outcome for a
patient. If such a case should arise,
the
judge should not be diverted away from the inference of
negligence
dictated by the
plaintiff's evidence
by mere
theoretical possibilities of how that outcome might have occurred
without negligence: the defendants' hypothesis must have
the ring of
plausibility about it."
161.
Van
der Linde J continued:
[62]
“
[29] The
proposition can also be put this way: the fact of the unexpected and
unusual event of cerebral palsy following an otherwise
uneventful
labour and birth, does not of itself justify the inference of
negligence
; but it does place a duty on
the defendant to call the witnesses who were there and can therefore
likely explain what happened,
if it wishes to avoid the risk of a
finding being made that in all the circumstances of the case, the
staff were more probably
than not causally negligent in relation to
the resultant consequence
.
[30]
Here the plaintiff was, by all accounts, of healthy state of mind and
body as she went into the procedure. She subjected herself
to a
procedure that is a common occurrence in hospitals and clinics across
the country. No-one expected a cerebral palsied baby
to be born.
The
records that the hospital in fact kept, were way sub-standard. It
justifies the inference, absence an explanation, that the
plaintiff
was as poorly monitored [as]
[63]
the records that were kept. These circumstances called for an
explanation, in my view; and in the absence of an explanation, on
all
the evidence that was presented to the court, the defendant's staff
failed properly to monitor the plaintiff's progress through
labour
and in deliver
y.”
162.
In my view,
the present case is
a
fortiori
:
here the medical personnel in the NICU were forewarned of the baby’s
precarious position and that the endotracheal tube
may become blocked
and that the baby required close monitoring and the tube frequent
suctioning, having been so signalled since
birth and by the stark
warning of the self-extubation shortly before the sentinel event.
163.
I have
previously referred to the two competing theses in relation to
whether it was the baby’s struggles that had alerted
the
nursing staff to the self-extubation rather than any close
observation of the baby at the time. The plaintiff’s thesis
is
that it was the baby’s struggles that alerted the nurses to her
breathing difficulties rather than any close observation
by the
nursing staff, which is consistent with a finding of negligence. The
NICU was working at full capacity: it is common cause
that the NICU
was full as the baby had to wait some 90 minutes before being able to
be admitted to the NICU once a need to admit
her had been identified.
The probabilities are that the nurses were working at full stretch.
This explains why it was only when
the baby was struggling to breath
to such an extent that she pulled out her tube that the nurses
reacted. It also lends support
to a finding on the probabilities that
once the baby had been re-intubated, and particularly in the absence
of any evidence of
a suctioning protocol having been issued by the
attending doctor, that the nurses then did not again attend to the
baby, including
to closely monitor her, and so did not perform any
suctioning as required over the next half an hour or so before the
sentinel
event.
164.
In my view,
the probabilities are that the medical staff had failed to take the
necessary reasonable steps to prevent the condition-causing
HII.
165.
The test for
negligence has been satisfied, on the available evidence, and
particularly in the absence of any exculpatory documentary
evidence
or any exculpatory evidence from factual witnesses evidently
available to the defendant but not called.
166.
I now turn to
whether that negligence factually and legally caused the HII
constituted by the sentinel event at 19h00 on 28 November
2012.
167.
The
SCA in
Minister
of Safety and Security v Van Duivenboden
2002
(6) SA 431 (SCA)
[64]
held in
relation to factual causation that:
“
A plaintiff
is not required to establish the causal link with certainty but only
to establish that the wrongful conduct was probably
a cause of the
loss, which calls for a sensible retrospective analysis of what would
probably have occurred, based upon the evidence
and what can be
expected to occur in the ordinary cause of human affairs rather than
an exercise in metaphysics.”
168.
And in
Minister
of Finance and Others v Gore NO
2007
(1) SA 111
(SCA), the SCA held
[65]
that:
“
Application
of the ‘but-for’ test is not based upon mathematics, pure
science or philosophy. It is a matter of common
sense, on the
practical way in which the ordinary person’s mind works against
the background of everyday-life experiences.”
169.
While it might
be that the tube would have become blocked even if there had been
frequent suctioning, and that as a matter of pure
logic, it cannot be
said that but for the absence of suctioning there would not have been
a sentinel event as the secretions might
have been so copious that it
would have blocked the tube regardless, I am not required to engage
in an exercise of metaphysics
or strict logic in evaluating these
issues but rather on a common sense basis and in applying
probabilities.
170.
Applying a
common-sense basis and on the probabilities. I am satisfied that
factual causation has been established. ‘But for’
the
omission of the medical personnel, particularly over the 30 to 60
minutes from the self-extubation incident to the sentinel
event at
approximately 19h00, to closely monitor the baby, to issue a
suctioning protocol, and to then execute that suctioning
protocol,
the endotracheal tube probably would not have become blocked and the
HII would have probably been avoided.
171.
I
am also satisfied that the legal requirements for legal causation
have also been satisfied.
The
negligent conduct is sufficiently closely or directly linked to the
loss for legal liability to ensue i.e. it is not too remote.
[66]
There are no considerations of policy that militate against a finding
that negligent conduct in an NICU of a hospital leading to
a blocked
endotracheal tube which in turn causes an HII of sufficient severity
to result in severe cerebral palsy should not be
visited with legal
liability on the basis that the negligent conduct is too remote from
the harm so caused.
172.
I therefore find that
the defendant has established causative negligence on the part of the
medical personnel for whom the defendant
is responsible.
173.
What
requires some consideration is whether it is open for the plaintiff
to succeed in demonstrating causative negligence in relation
to the
postpartum HII that took place in the NICU, in contrast to an
intrapartum HII. The plaintiff in her particulars of claim
pleaded
that the minor child suffered the HII “
[a]s
a result of the prolonged labour, a lack of attention and medical
care as may be reasonably required in the circumstances,
and in
particularly to timeously perform a Caesarean Section to deliver the
Minor
”.
[67]
The grounds of negligence relied upon, although pleaded somewhat
generically, relate to labour and delivery and in particular the
performance of a caesarean section.
174.
By the time the trial
started, the plaintiff’s case had progressed from those
pleadings in that in both the plaintiff’s
opening address, both
written and oral, the hypoxic ischaemic injuries that she relied upon
had expanded to both “
before
and after birth
”.
At the commencement of his opening address, the plaintiff’s
senior counsel specifically pointed out that the plaintiff
sought to
establish negligence at two stages, being intrapartum and postpartum.
The plaintiff’s counsel set out the respects
in which the
plaintiff contended that there had been intrapartum negligence and
then continued to describe the contended for postpartum
negligence.
This included specific reference to the sentinel event that took
place at 19h00 in the NICU when the endotracheal tube
was blocked.
This reliance on postpartum causative negligence continues in the
plaintiff’s heads of argument.
175.
Throughout there was
no objection from the defendant’s counsel that the plaintiff
was going beyond the pleaded case or that
the defendant was being
taken by surprise.
176.
This expansion by the
plaintiff of its case was already evident in the plaintiff’s
expert, Dr Solomons, making common cause
at commencement of the trial
with the defendant’s expert and his counterpart, Dr Mogashoa,
that there was evidence of a postpartum
HII, as discussed above.
177.
I have also described
how the defendant’s counsel fully explored this expanded case,
first in the cross-examination of the
plaintiff’s witnesses,
and in particular the neonatologist Prof Smith, and then in leading
the defendant’s expert neonatologist,
Prof Cooper.
178.
I do not recall any
objection by the defendant throughout the trial at this expansion of
the plaintiff’s case, whether in
the opening address of the
plaintiff, or during the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses,
or during the defendant’s
opening address, or during the
examination of the defendant’s witnesses or even in closing
argument.
179.
Scant regard was had
by either of the parties to the pleadings. I cannot recall any
particular reference to the pleadings throughout
the trial, whether
by way of seeking to constrain the case to those pleadings or
otherwise.
180.
Given the cursory
regard had by the parties to the pleadings, it appears that a
departure of the case from the pleadings, whatever
inconvenience it
may have had for the court, did not concern either of the parties,
and in particular the defendant.
181.
As
oft-cited from
Robinson
v Randfontein Estates Gold Mine Co Ltd
1925
AD 173:
[68]
“
The
object of pleading is to define the issues; and parties will be kept
strictly to their pleas where any departure would cause
prejudice or
prevent fully enquiry. But within those limits the court has a
discretion for pleadings are made for the court not
the court for the
pleadings”
.
182.
The
SCA in
EC
Chenia and Sons CC v Lamé and Van Blerk
[2006] ZASCA 10
;
2006
(4) SA 574
(SCA) pointed out that the question as to whether to
permit a party to go beyond its pleaded case was one of
prejudice.
[69]
One of the
factors to be considered is whether there was any objection raised at
the trial to a case going beyond the pleadings.
As appears from
EC
Chenia
:
[70]
“
If counsel
really believed that this evidence was irrelevant and thus
inadmissible because it was not covered by the pleadings,
he should
have objected there and then. The plaintiff could then have tried to
persuade the trial court that the evidence was indeed
covered by the
pleadings or, otherwise, sought an amendment. A party cannot be
allowed to lull its opponent into a false sense
of security by
allowing evidence in the trial without objection and then argue at
the end of the trial, or on appeal, that such
evidence should be
ignored because it was inadmissible. It seems to me that when the
defendant’s counsel decided not to challenge
both the
admissibility and substance of Da Silva’s evidence, he took a
calculated risk and any possible prejudice resulting
from such
failure must be ascribed to the realisation of that risk and not to
the plaintiff’s departure from its pleadings”
.
183.
A
person can further be prejudiced by a case that goes beyond the
pleading if that expanded issue is not investigated fully. Where
the
issue is fully canvassed in evidence and the parties have had ample
opportunity to deal with the point when it arose out of
the evidence,
that the issue may not have been pleaded need not stand in the way of
a determination being made on that issue.
[71]
184.
Moody
v Crossman
1969
(3) SA 121
(N) was an instance where the relevant issues may not have
been sufficiently raised in the pleadings. The court found
[72]
that this notwithstanding, “
however,
extrinsic evidence was led without objection in the court a quo and
this was canvassed and sought to be countered both
in
cross-examination and counter-availing evidence. In these
circumstances, the issues between the parties must be taken to have
been enlarged to include those canvassed in the court a quo
”.
185.
The
court then referred to the following dictum of the then Appellate
Division in
Shill
v Milner
1937
AD 101:
[73]
“
This
preliminary portion of Mr Ramsbottom’s argument consists
largely of an examination of the
ipsissima
verba
of the pleadings. While
listening to him, however, I could not but ask myself what the
substantial issue was between the parties
in the court below.
The importance of pleadings should not be unduly magnified. ‘The
object of pleading is to define the
issues; and parties will be kept
strictly to their pleas where any departure would cause prejudice or
would prevent full enquiry.
But within these limits the court has a
discretion. For pleadings are made for the court, not the court for
the pleadings. Where
a party has made every facility to place all the
facts before the trial Court and the investigation into all the
circumstances
has been as thorough and as patient as in this
instance, there is no justification for interference by an appellate
tribunal merely
because the pleading of the opponent had not been as
explicit as it might have been.’ Robinson v Randfontein Estates
Gold
Mine Co Ltd 1925(AD 198. In another case, Wynberg Municipality v
Dreyer
1920 AD 443
, an attempt was made to confine the issue on
appeal strictly to the pleadings, but it was pointed out by Innes,
C.J., that the
issue had been widened in the court below, by both
parties. ‘The position should have been regularised of course,’
he said, ‘by an amendment of the pleadings; but the defendant
cannot now claim to confine the issue within limits which he
assisted
to enlarge’.
”
186.
The
present case can be distinguished from that in the very recent
decision of the Constitutional Court in
TM
obo MM v MEC for the Executive Council for Health and Social
Development, Gauteng
[74]
where both the Constitutional Court as well as the majority and
minority judgments in the Supreme Court of Appeal found that the
issue of wrongfulness had not been raised on the pleadings.
[75]
In fact, wrongfulness was not a disputed issue on the pleadings.
[76]
In both the High Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal the debate was
whether there was negligence and causation. Wrongfulness
was assumed
and was not an issue before those courts.
[77]
And so, the Constitutional Court found, it was impermissible for that
undisputed issue of wrongfulness to be relied upon during
the course
of an appeal to the Constitutional Court as a constitutional issue
engaging that court’s jurisdiction.
[78]
The Constitutional Court therefore declined to grant leave to appeal.
In the present instance, the issue of causative negligence
had at all
times been the live issue between the parties, both on the pleadings
and during the course of the trial.
187.
Considering
the manner in which the trial was conducted, which included the
parties’ scant regard to the pleadings, the consistent
failure
of the defendant to object to the expansion of the plaintiff’s
case to rely on postpartum HIIs, the defendant’s
thorough
cross-examination of the plaintiff’s expert neonatologist on
the issue, the defendant’s own leading of evidence
in-chief on
the issue and the defendant having already foreshadowed that such
expansion might arise in already stating in the expert
summary of
Prof Cooper that no negligence can be ascribed to the postpartum
HII,
[79]
it is open for a
finding to be made of causative negligence arising from the
postpartum HII, as I have done.
THE
ASSERTED INTRAPARTUM HYPOXIC ISCHAEMIC EVENT
188.
Having found that the defendant is liable
in damages to the plaintiff arising from the hypoxic ischaemic injury
that took place
postpartum in the NICU, it is unnecessary to deal
with the plaintiff’s further asserted (and pleaded) case that a
HII sufficient
to result in the condition had already been sustained
intrapartum. Nonetheless, to the extent that it may be of
significance and
as it affects the costs of some of the experts, I
deal with certain aspects thereof.
189.
It is necessary for the plaintiff to prove
on a balance of probabilities that there is a causal nexus between
the conduct relied
upon (whether by way of commission or omission)
and the damage. Whether or not this causal nexus has been established
in a particular
case is a question of fact that must be answered in
light of the oral evidence and the relevant probabilities.
190.
In deciding the issue of causation, it is
necessary first to determine whether there is a factual causal nexus
between the act (or
omission) and the harmful consequences, and then
if such factual causation is established, to consider whether legal
causation
has been established.
191.
The
exercise of considering factual causation is to ascertain whether the
defendant’s act or omission caused or materially
contributed to
the harm suffered.
[80]
192.
Our courts in seeking to answer this
enquiry apply the so-called ‘but-for’ test, which is
described in
International Shipping
as:
“
designed
to determine whether
a
postulated cause
can be identified as a causa sine qua non of the loss in
question
”
[81]
and that “
in
order to apply this test one must make a hypothetical enquiry as to
what probably would have happened but for the wrongful conduct
of the
defendant. This enquiry may involve the mental elimination of the
wrongful conduct and the substitution of a hypothetical
course of
lawful conduct and the posing of the question as to whether upon such
a hypothesis plaintiff’s loss would have
ensued or not. If it
would in any event have ensued, then the wrongful conduct was not a
cause of the plaintiff’s loss: aliter,
if it would not so have
ensued. If a wrongful act is shown in this way not to be a cause sine
qua non of the loss suffered, then
no legal liability can arise. On
the other hand, demonstration that the wrongful act was a causa sine
qua non of the loss does
not necessarily result in legal liability.
The second enquiry then arises, viz, whether the wrongful act is
linked sufficiently
closely or directly to the loss for legal
liability to ensue or whether, as it is said, the loss is too remote.
This is basically
a juridical problem in the solution of which
considerations of policy may play a part. This is sometimes called
‘legal causation’
”.
[82]
193.
From this it is clear, and in any event, it
is a matter of logic, that before consideration can be given as to
whether causation
has been established (whether factual or legal) it
is necessary to identify the loss-causing event as only then is it
possible
to, for example, make the hypothetical enquiry as to
probably what would have happened but for the wrongful conduct of the
defendant.
194.
In this instance, it is common cause that
the condition occurred as a result of an acute-profound hypoxic
ischaemic injury. What
is not common cause is whether that
acute-profound HII had already occurred intrapartum.
195.
The plaintiff’s case is that this
acute-profound HII occurred during the intrapartum period, and so
that by the time the subsequent
injury-causing HII event (or events,
as the case may be) occurred postpartum in the NICU, sufficient brain
damage had already been
caused to result in the condition. The
defendant on the other hand contends that although ‘some’
hypoxic injury may
have taken place intrapartum, it was not
sufficient to constitute an acute-profound HII resulting in the
condition, and that therefore
the plaintiff has not proven that an
acute-profound HII occurred intrapartum.
196.
In the circumstances, it is first necessary
for the plaintiff to prove on the probabilities that an
acute-profound HII occurred
intrapartum, as only once that is
established can further questions be considered such as whether the
wrongful act, which the plaintiff
asserts, caused that loss, and does
meet the requirements for causation.
197.
The
respective radiologists, Prof Andronikou and Dr Weinstein agree that
“
the
MRI demonstrates acute-profound HII that occurred in a term brain
probably in the perinatal time period
”.
[83]
Dr Weinstein goes further to state in the joint minute that in his
view the HII was mixed, i.e. that it was predominantly an
acute-profound
HII but had aspects of a prolonged HII.
198.
While the plaintiff called its expert
radiologist, Prof Andronikou, the defendant did not do the same in
relation to its expert
radiologist, Dr Weinstein.
199.
Prof
Andronikou testified that the assumption must not be made when
considering whether a HII is an acute-profound HII that it can
only
occur over minutes (in contrast to a longer period), notwithstanding
what is generally understood by an injury being “
acute
”.
Prof Andronikou testified that an acute-profound HII could occur even
if there was no sentinel (catastrophic) event and
that it can occur
over a few hours, rather than only a matter
of minutes (but admittedly not days). Prof
Andronikou testified that
he no longer uses the descriptive adjective “
acute-profound”
in his expert reports and joint minutes
[84]
as it does result in confusion and the incorrect attribution to an
acute-profound HII of a period of causation that is of minutes,
where
in his view that was not necessarily always so.
200.
Although
Prof Andronikou was challenged in cross-examination that his recent
understanding of the use of the description “
acute-profound
”
is not supported by Dr Weinstein, and is also contrary to the Supreme
Court of Appeal’s view as what constitutes an
acute-profound
HII,
[85]
the defendant failed
to call her expert radiologist, Dr Weinstein to proffer his opinion
in rebuttal of that of Prof Andronikou.
201.
That a court may have decided in a
particular instance based upon a particular set of facts as to what
constituted an ‘acute-profound’
HII in that matter does
not mean that that court’s finding of what constitutes an
acute-profound HII in that matter is then
definitive for all matters
going forward. Such a finding is a factual finding rather than a
legal finding, and as the legal adage
goes, each case depends on its
own facts.
202.
When,
for example, in
AN
v
MEC
,
Eastern Cape
[86]
Gorven
AJA for the majority stated that “
[a]cute
means sudden,
as
opposed
to developing over a period of time”
[87]
and
that “
[a]n
acute profound event means a sudden, not progressive, event”
in contrast to “
[a]
partial prolonged event”
,
[88]
that was done with reference to the evidence placed before the court
in that matter, including the expert opinion evidence.
[89]
203.
As there are advances in medical research,
what the medical profession may have considered to be an
acute-profound injury can change,
becoming potentially more
expansive, or more restrictive. In this instance, Prof Andronikou
explains himself that in his view a
more expansive view must be
adopted as to what would constitute an acute-profound HII sufficient
to result in the condition and
this includes damage that is caused
over a period of a few hours rather than abruptly over a few minutes.
204.
Prof Smith, the neonatologist for the
plaintiff, adopted Prof Andronikou’s more expansive use of what
is to be understood
as an acute-profound HII and that this was
occurred intrapartum and more particularly during the time 08h30 to
11h10 when no CTG
monitoring of the foetus was taking place.
205.
Prof Cooper, who is a neonatologist and not
a radiologist, disagreed, persisting that an acute-profound HII
follows a period of
prolonged bradycardia of approximately 10 to 45
minutes, and not over the lengthy period suggested by Profs
Andronikou and Smith
and that, his reasoning continues, the only time
when this could have happened was during the sentinel event described
in the NICU
as taking place at 19h00. In other words, the defendant
persists that an acute-profound HII could not have occurred
intrapartum
as there was no sentinel or catastrophic event during
that period that could account for an acute-profound HII.
206.
I
am prepared to accept for present purposes, on the evidence before me
and in the absence of the defendant adducing expert radiologist
opinion in rebuttal of the expert opinion of the plaintiff’s
expert radiologist Prof Andronikou (whose expert evidence was
sufficiently cogent that I cannot reject it as being logically flawed
in reasoning or otherwise unsound),
[90]
that an acute-profound HII can occur over a lengthier period and that
therefore it was possible for an acute-profound HII to have
occurred
during the unmonitored hours of the active phase of labour without
the occurrence of a recognised sentinel event.
207.
But having accepted for present purposes
that this is so, this does not answer the anterior question, whether
as a matter of probability,
an acute-profound HII did in fact occur
during that period of 08h30 to 11h10 on 28 November 2012 when there
was no CTG monitoring
of the foetus.
208.
As a matter of fact, it is common cause
between the parties that an acute-profound HII did occur by at least
the sentinel event
that took place in the NICU later that day after
birth at 19h00. It is for the plaintiff in asserting a
condition-causing HII intrapartum
to prove that an acute-profound HII
had already taken place before then, and more particularly, as
pleaded in its particulars of
claim, intrapartum.
209.
Upon an assessment of the evidence, I am
unable to find that on the probabilities it was more likely than not
that an acute-profound
HII had already occurred intrapartum. It might
have occurred during the unmonitored hours immediately preceding the
minor child’s
birth but then it also might have happened after
the child was born but before her admission to the NICU. The
plaintiff herself
contended that after the child was born but before
her admission to the NICU the medical personnel failed to properly
and adequately
resuscitate the minor child, who was clearly in
distress from when she was born. And then there is also the
possibility that there
was no acute-profound HII at all until the
sentinel event in the NICU at 19h00.
210.
It will be recalled that the primary case
advanced by the plaintiff was that the acute-profound HII took place
intrapartum, specifically
asserting that postnatal hypoxic ischaemic
injury was excluded. It would appear that it was the plaintiff’s
intention, at
least initially, to call Prof Solomons to advance his
opinion as to why the acute-profound HII took place intrapartum, and
so prove
this part of her case.
211.
But
Prof Solomons was not called, and so this evidence was not led. This
may be explained by the adaption by the plaintiff of her
position at
the commencement of the trial to accept that there also was a
postnatal HII.
[91]
Although
the parties accept that they are bound by the agreement expressed in
the joint minute of the paediatric neurologists,
Prof Solomons and
his counterpart, Dr Mogashoa, as a consequence of Prof Solomons not
being called, there is a paucity of evidence
on whether the
acute-profound occurred intrapartum rather than at some time
thereafter.
212.
Prof
Solomons, in paragraph 7 of the joint minute records his opinion that
“
the
available evidence indicates that Kurhula’s hypoxic ischaemic
injury occurred in the intrapartum period
”.
His counterpart, Dr Mogashoa, disagreed.
[92]
213.
Recourse
to Prof Solomons’ expert summary dated August 2016 in advancing
his opinion why he was of the view that the HII occurred
intrapartum
does so with reference to two sets of criteria which he identifies
for purposes of defining whether an acute intrapartum
hypoxic event
is sufficient to cause cerebral palsy. These are criteria he refers
to as having been established by Volpe JJ,
Neurology
of the Newborn
[93]
and also those of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
2014 [“ACOG”]
[94]
.
214.
On applying the Volpe and ACOG criteria, he
proffers his expert opinion that three out of the four criteria for
intrapartum asphyxia
insult are established.
215.
The difficulty though, as set out above, is
that Prof Solomons was not called to give his evidence in this
regard, including to
confirm his expert opinion proffered in his
report and to afford the defendant an opportunity to test that expert
opinion. The
only evidence placed before me in this regard by Prof
Solomons is that which is in the form of the issues as were agreed
between
Prof Solomons and his counterpart, Dr Mogashoa, in their
joint minute. Those agreements do not include agreement on the
hypoxic
ischaemic injury having been caused intrapartum. To the
contrary, Dr Mogashoa was of the view that the HII may have been
caused
by the postpartum incident in the NICU. It bears repeating
that Prof Solomons’ initial view, and which remained his view
until commencement of trial, is that a postnatal HII was excluded and
the amendment of his view at the commencement of trial that
he now
agreed with Dr Mogashoa that there was a postnatal HII still leaves
unresolved whether there was also an intrapartum HII.
216.
In this regard, something can also be said
about the reliance by the plaintiff’s experts on an Apgar score
at 5 minutes at
6/10 as being indicative of an intrapartum HII.
217.
The experts, who agreed that one of the
AGOC criteria in assessing whether there had been an acute peripartum
asphyxia incident,
is as follows:
“
Apgar
score of less than 5 at 5 minutes and 10 minutes
1. Low Apgar scores at 5
minutes and 10 minutes clearly confer an increased relative risk of
cerebral palsy. The degree
of Apgar abnormality at 5 and 10 minutes
correlates with the risk of cerebral palsy. However, most infants
with low Apgar scores
will not develop cerebral palsy.
2.
There are many potential causes for low Apgar scores. If the Apgar
score at 5 minutes is greater than or equal to
7, it is unlikely that
peripartum hypoxia-ischemia played a major role in causing neonatal
encephalopathy.”
[95]
218.
It is common cause that the minor child had
Apgar scores at birth recorded as 6/10 and 6/10 at 1 and 5 minutes
respectively. The
plaintiff’s experts interpreted this as
satisfying the Apgar criterion as indicative of acute peripartum
asphyxia. On the
other hand, the defendant’s experts disagreed.
219.
I must confess some difficulty in applying
this criterion. While it is clear, in applying this criterion, that
if the Apgar score
is 5 or less, this is indicative of an
acute-profound HII. It is also clear, in applying this criterion,
that where the Apgar score
is greater than or equal to 7, then it is
unlikely that hypoxia ischaemia played a major role in causing the
condition. But what
of an Apgar score of 6/10 in applying the
criterion? It is not clear to me what is to be made of such a score
in applying this
criterion, as is evidenced by the differing views of
the experts as to whether this criterion was in fact met or not.
220.
In the circumstances, at most, I find the
application of this criterion indecisive.
221.
In the absence of evidence that such
indications as there may have been that certain of the remaining
Volpe and/or ACOG criteria
may have been satisfied (such as the need
for resuscitation of the baby after birth not being attributable to
the baby suffering
from congenital pneumonia, as I have already found
to be the case), adds to my inability to find on the probabilities
that the
acute-profound HII did occur intrapartum. As stated, this
probably was going to be explored by the plaintiff more fully in the
expert evidence of Dr Solomons, and perhaps his counterpart Dr
Mogashoa for the defendant, but neither of these witnesses were
called.
222.
In the circumstances, I am unable to find,
on the probabilities, that an acute-profound HII occurred intrapartum
sufficient to result
in the condition. It is insufficient for there
to have been some damage intrapartum as the case advanced by the
plaintiff is that
such injury as took place during the intrapartum
period was sufficient to cause the condition. It is therefore
irrelevant whether
the defendant concedes that some damage was caused
intrapartum but where the concession is not that such damage is
sufficient to
result in the condition.
223.
As the plaintiff has failed to prove that
there was acute-profound HII intrapartum, it follows that a
consideration of what conduct
or omission by the defendant’s
medical personnel may have caused that HII event and whether the
defendant’s medical
personnel were at fault for that conduct is
not only unnecessary but also unsound. Those further enquiries, such
as causative negligence,
must take place with reference to the
loss-causing event and an analysis of those issues without reference
to that event would
be pointless.
CONCLUSION
224.
The defendant is accordingly liable for
such damages as the plaintiff may have suffered arising from the
hypoxic ischaemic injury
that took place postpartum in the NICU.
225.
As the plaintiff succeeded, she is entitled
to her costs.
226.
The defendant did not raise any serious
objection to the costs relating to the plaintiff’s experts,
including the qualifying
and reservation fees of those experts, if
any. As appears above, Prof Solomons did not testify and insofar as
reservation costs
are concerned, the trial was conducted virtually,
which naturally provides more scope for the experts to mitigate such
inroads
as their required testimony may otherwise have made in
relation to their practices. These are issues that the taxing master
will
take into account.
227.
The evidence of the plaintiff’s
experts Dr Hofmeyr and Prof Nolte did not relate to the postpartum
HII, but in seeking to
establish causative negligence intrapartum. As
the plaintiff failed to establish the latter, the costs of the
plaintiff’s
experts Dr Hofmeyr and Prof Nolte are disallowed.
228.
The plaintiff included in her heads of
argument various prayers in relation to the payment of taxed costs,
more particularly in
relation to the timing thereof and interest
thereon should those costs not be paid. As full argument was not
addressed to me as
to why such prayers would be necessary where
ordinarily these are not issues that are specifically addressed in
the court order,
I prefer not to make such orders.
229.
The Deputy Judge President allocated ten
days to this trial. As it turned out, through the efforts of both the
plaintiff’s
and defendant’s counsel, the evidence was
completed within six days, and with argument taking place a few days
later after
the preparation of heads of argument. I express my
gratitude to the parties and their legal teams in ensuring that the
trial was
completed within the allocated period.
230.
An order is accordingly made as follows:
230.1.
The defendant is liable for payment of 100%
of the plaintiff’s proven or agreed damages, in her
representative capacity on
behalf of the minor child, arising from
the minor child’s irreversible hypoxic ischaemic brain injury
and neonatal hypoxic
ischaemic encephalopathy, manifesting as
resultant profound global mental delay, microcephaly and mixed
cerebral palsy, suffered
as a result of the negligence of the Tembisa
Hospital on 28 November 2012.
230.2.
The defendant is ordered to pay the
plaintiff’s costs in respect of the determination of the issue
of liability, such costs
to include:
230.2.1.
the reasonable costs of obtaining the
medico-legal reports of the following experts:
230.2.1.1.
Dr Gericke – specialist
paediatrician;
230.2.1.2.
Dr Andronikou – specialist
radiologist;
230.2.1.3.
Dr Regan Solomons – paediatric
neurologist;
230.2.1.4.
Prof Smith – neonatologist.
230.2.2.
the reasonable qualifying and reservation
fees of these experts, if any;
230.2.3.
the reasonable fees of these experts in
respect of their preparation for and holding of joint expert meetings
with their respective
counterparts, if any, including the costs in
respect of drafting and finalising joint minutes emanating from such
meetings;
230.2.4.
the costs consequent upon the employment of
two counsel, where so employed.
230.3.
The plaintiff’s costs shall be paid
into the trust account of the plaintiff’s attorneys, MED
Attorneys, details of which
are as follows:
Mokoduo Erasmus Davidson Attorneys
Trust Account
First National Bank, Rosebank Branch
Account Number: [....]
Branch Code: [....]
Gilbert
AJ
Date
of hearing:
16-20 May 2022
23 May 2022
26 May 2022
Date
of judgment:
27 June 2022
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
GJ Strydom SC and A Viljoen
Instructed
by:
MED Attorneys, Johannesburg
Counsel
for the Defendant: N
Makopo
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney
[1]
The
joint minute of the paediatricians/neonatologists at p
ara
12
records
that the minor child developed neonatal Grade II to III
encephalopathy, i.e., of a moderate-severe degree.
[2]
See,
for example,
Oppelt
v Department of Health, Western Cape
2016
(1) SA 325
(CC) at para 34.
[3]
[2013]
EWHC 3560 (Comm)
[4]
At
para 19.
[5]
At
para 22.
[6]
Subsequently
applied in a personal injury case in
AB
v Pro-Nation Ltd
[2016]
EWHC 1022 (QB).
[7]
At
p
aras
64 to 74.
[8]
Rogers
AJA in
Bee
para
64 citing Sutherland J in
Thomas
v BD Sarens (Pty) Ltd
[2012]
ZAGPJHC 161 at para 11.
[9]
That
minor aspect was a continued disagreement that there had been no
meconium staining of liquor.
[10]
I
note that this distinction was made by an expert in
AN
v MEC, Eastern Cape
below in para 56.
[11]
See
Uniform Rule 37(6)(k).
[12]
Caselines
section 020:1.
[13]
[2018]
ZASCA 141
(1 October 2018).
[14]
AM
obo KM v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape
above
at
para 13.
[15]
Bee
v Road Accident Fund
above,
at 386C: “
Unless
the trial court itself were for any reason dissatisfied with the
agreement and alerted the parties to the need to adduce
evidence on
the agreed material, the trial court would, I think, be bound, and
certainly entitled, to accept the matters agreed
by the experts.”
[16]
It
is unclear precisely which ward, but it was clearly not the NICU.
[17]
Abbreviated
on occasion in the notes as “BA”.
[18]
Doctor’s
progress notes at 006-54.
[19]
Nurse’s
progress notes at 006-118.
[20]
Doctor’s
progress notes at 006-54.
[21]
Intubation
is the insertion of a tube into the trachea for the purposes of
assisted ventilation.
[22]
At
006-53.
[23]
Doctor’s
progress note at Caselines 006-53.
[24]
See
the heading on the doctor’s notes at 006-52.
[25]
Doctor’s
progress note at Caselines 006-53.
[26]
Dr
Marishane in testifying as an expert special obstetrician and
gynaecologist for the defendant expressed reservations as to
the use
of the term “birth asphyxia” as it was somewhat of a
generic term that may have differing shades of meaning.
My
understanding of the use of the term by the parties in these
proceedings, particularly the plaintiff, was that it was a diagnosis
of hypoxia (lack of oxygen to the brain) brought about by the
consequences of prolonged labour and birth, rather than brought
about by some other cause such congenital pneumonia.
[27]
See
the header to the doctor’s notes for 13h00 and 14h00 on 28
November 2012, at 006-54, 006.53.
[28]
Aspirant
pneumonia is lung infection caused by the foetus breathing in
(aspirating) liquid (such as meconium-bearing amniotic
fluid) rather
than infection contracted from the mother as is the case with
congenital pneumonia.
[29]
Neethling
Potgieter Visser
Law
of Delict
6
th
edition LexisNexis (2010) at p 25 fn 4 makes the point that
delictual liability requires a “
damage-causing
event”
which is “
a
factual situation (consisting of a human act and surrounding
circumstances) giving rise to damage”
.
Damage caused by a disease that is not a result of negligence cannot
give rise to delictual liability. Hence the defendant’s
case
that the damage was caused by pneumonia. The plaintiff does not seek
to demonstrate that the defendant’s negligence
was responsible
for the
foetus
contracting
pneumonia. To the contrary, the plaintiff disputes the diagnosis of
pneumonia altogether.
[30]
See
Smith’s paragraph 17.5 at 009-15 and Cooper’s
corresponding Cooper paragraph 17.5 at 009-17.
[31]
Such
as in paras 17.5, 17.7 and 17.11 at Caselines 009-17, 18.
[32]
Para
17.5 at 009-15.
[33]
Joint
minute para 17.7 at Caselines 006-16.
[34]
Joint
minute para 17.11 at Caselines 009-16.
[35]
Joint
minute p
ara
17.11 at Caselines 009-18.
[36]
Para
26.
[37]
Michael
para
36.
[38]
Oppelt
para
11 at 332G.
[39]
Although
the plaintiff did not admit an absence of meconium-stained liquor,
there was no recordal of meconium-stained liquor in
the medical
records.
[40]
At
006-54.
[41]
To
be distinguished from meconium-stained secretions.
[42]
Joint
minute para 18 at 009-18, 19.
[43]
Joint
minute para 19 at 009-19, 20.
[44]
Caselines
006-107.
[45]
Caselines
006-52.
[46]
See
sections 13
and
17
of the
National Health Act, 2003
as discussed by
Spilg J
in
Khoza v MEC for Health and Social Development, Gauteng
2015 (3) SA 266
(GJ), para 34 to 36.
[47]
Khoza
v MEC
above
para 47 at 279D.
[48]
Khoza
v MEC
above
para 47 at 279E.
[49]
Caselines
006-52.
[50]
Caselines
006-107.
[51]
Caselines
006-52, 53.
[52]
At
106 to 107 (footnotes omitted).
[53]
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428 (A)
[54]
1914
AD 519
at 525
[55]
[2017]
ZASCA 86
(2 June 2017), as cited by Van der Linde J in
Khoza
v MEC: Health and Social Development
2017 JDR 1912 (GJ), para 6.
[56]
This
appears from the multiple narrations in the attending doctors and
nurses’ notes such as that the baby did not cry at
birth, had
(relatively) low Apgar scores, was “gasping”, was pink
in colour when on oxygen but blue when not on oxygen,
needed to be
assisted in breaching with nasal prongs, and was floppy.
[57]
Above
(2015 (3) SA 266 (GJ)).
[58]
Above
(2017 JDR 1912) para 25.
[59]
Above,
para 28.
[60]
In
Ratcliffe
v Plymouth and Torbay Health Authority
[1998] EWCA Civ 2000
(11 February 1998), para 48.
[61]
Para
17.
[62]
At
para 29. My emphasis.
[63]
The
judgment reads ‘and’ but this appears to be a
typographical error as otherwise it does not make grammatical sense.
[64]
At
para 25.
[65]
At
para 33.
[66]
International
Shipping Co (Pty) Ltd v Bentley
1990
(1) SA 680
(AD) at 700I.
[67]
Particulars
of claim para 7 at 002-5.
[68]
At
198.
[69]
At
p
ara
13.
[70]
At
para 15.
[71]
See,
for example,
John
Williams Motors Ltd v Minister of Defence
1966
(3) SA 27
(A) at 32C-D.
[72]
At
para 122 E.
[73]
At
p105.
[74]
[2022]
ZACC 18
(30 May 2022). The majority and minority decisions of the
Supreme Court of Appeal are
The
MEC for Health & Social Development, Gauteng v TM obo MM
[2021] ZASCA 110
(10 August 2021).
[75]
See,
for example, the SCA majority decision at para 58 to 68.
[76]
There
had been a stated case, where the issues to be adjudicated were
negligence and causation: see para 13 of the minority decision
in
the SCA.
[77]
See
Constitutional Court judgment para 51.
[78]
See
Constitutional Court judgment para 51 and 52.
[79]
Paragraphs
22.2 and 22.3 of the joint minute at 009-21, 22.
[80]
AN
on behalf of EN v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape
[2019]
ZASCA 102
(15 August 2019), para 4.
[81]
At
700F. My emphasis.
[82]
At
700F-I.
[83]
Joint
Minute at 009-1.
[84]
When
preparing the expert reports and minutes in this matter, in 2014 and
2016, Prof Andronikou still was using the description
“acute-profound”.
[85]
It
is unclear to which judgment/s the defendant’s counsel was
referring.
[86]
Above.
[87]
Para
9.
[88]
Para
13.
[89]
In
AN
v MEC, Eastern Cape
there was no dispute that there had been, intrapartum, a sudden,
sustained total interruption of
blood
supply
to the fetal brain (i.e., a sentinel event), whatever the
nomenclature: see para 8, 9 and 17.
[90]
It
appeared during the evidence of Prof. Andronikou that this issue of
what constitutes an ‘acute profound” HII is
apparently a
topical issue, with apparently conflicting views between experts and
with what was said in relation to the topic
in
AN
v MEC, Eastern Cape
above
as also
AM
obo KM v MEC, Eastern Cape
above. It was therefore with some surprise that the defendant did
not call the evidence of its expert radiologist Dr Weinstein
to
proffer his expertise this apparently topical issue, and so I was
left only with the expert opinion of Prof. Andronikou.
[91]
See
the subsequent concessions by the plaintiff’s expert
paediatric
neurologist,
Prof Solomons, in respect of paragraphs 6 and 7 of the joint minute,
at 009-2 and 009-3.
[92]
Joint
Minutes 009-3.
[93]
4
th
Edition, 2001. WB Saunders Company.
[94]
Neonatal
Encephalopathy and Neurological Outcome, 2
nd
Edition. Report of The American College of Obstetricians and
Gynaecologists Task Force on Neonatal Encephalopathy, 2014.
[95]
Extracted
from the report of Prof Cooper at 008-198.
sino noindex
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