Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 623South Africa
Mulligan N.O. obo NBS and Another v The MEC for Health, Gauteng (A5023/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 623 (12 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 August 2022
Headnotes
of the central issues is largely correct, the facts upon which the conflicting opinions are based, is what needs analysis.
Judgment
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## Mulligan N.O. obo NBS and Another v The MEC for Health, Gauteng (A5023/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 623 (12 August 2022)
Mulligan N.O. obo NBS and Another v The MEC for Health, Gauteng (A5023/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 623 (12 August 2022)
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sino date 12 August 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appeal
Case No: A5023/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
12/08/2022
In
the matter between:
ADV
SLP MULLIGAN N.O.
(as
curator ad litem
)
obo
N [....] B [....] S [....]
1
1
st
Appellant
B
[....] D [....] S [....]
2
2
nd
Appellant
and
THE
MEC FOR HEALTH,
GAUTENG
Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. The date and time
for
hand-down is deemed to be
10h00
on 12 August 2022
JUDGMENT
Opperman J: (Makume J
and Kathree-Setiloane J concur)
Introduction
[1]
N [....] B [....] S [....] 1, a minor,
(‘
the child’
)
is permanently disfigured and impaired as a result of the late
diagnosis of osteomyelitis to his left lower leg / ankle. He has
a
deformed leg and a permanent limp. Mr S [....] 2 instituted action on
behalf of his child. His case is that he had taken the
child to the
Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital (‘
the
Rahima Moosa Hospital’
)
repeatedly and was not helped.
[2]
The dispute on appeal concerns the question
of whether the osteomyelitis could and should have been diagnosed
earlier by the employees
of the Rahima Moosa Hospital. Osteomyelitis
is an infection of the bone, which occurs when a bacterial or fungal
infection enters
the bone tissue from the bloodstream.
[3]
The matter before the court
a
quo
was limited to the issue of
liability.
[4]
Mr S [....] 2 testified and called Dr
Versfeld (an orthopaedic surgeon). The respondent called Dr
Eltringham (an orthopaedic surgeon)
and Drs P Nair and A Radlonova,
who were the casualty officers on duty in casualty at the Rahima
Moosa Hospital during the nights
of 2 February 2012 and 14 February
2012 respectively.
[5]
The court
a
quo
, held that:
‘…
The
case centres on medical expert evidence and the conflicting views of
two orthopaedic surgeons, Dr GA Versfeld, who gave expert
evidence on
behalf of the plaintiff, and Dr M Eltringham, who gave expert
evidence on behalf of the defendant….’.
Although this summary of
the central issues is largely correct, the facts upon which the
conflicting opinions are based, is what
needs analysis.
[6]
The court
a
quo
did not consider Mr S [....] 2 to
be a credible witness and held that his evidence on the controversial
issues was unreliable and
biased as he blamed the medical staff at
the Rahima Moosa Hospital for the child’s present condition.
The court also found
his evidence to be improbable.
Mr S [....] 2’s
evidence
[7]
The
facts of the matter and the sequence of events are of cardinal
importance in this appeal. The court
a
quo
failed
to properly determine the facts of the matter and the sequence of
events. It erroneously relied on the facts and sequence
of events as
disclosed by the hospital records, rejected and excluded the direct
evidence of Mr S [....] 2 and overlooked other
facts and
probabilities. I thus hold the view that the court
a
quo
misdirected itself on the facts and that we are therefore entitled to
reverse such findings.
[1]
[8]
Mr S [....] 2, during his evidence covered
a number of topics including his dissatisfaction with the conduct of
the staff of the
Rahima Moosa Hospital. As concerning his
dissatisfaction with the conduct of the staff, it was put to him in
cross-examination
that he has an axe to grind with the Rahima Moosa
Hospital and that his evidence was clouded as a result. He denied
having a grudge
against the hospital and explained that all his
children were born there and that the child was, in any event,
treated at the Rahima
Moosa Hospital after all of this had occurred.
[9]
The following topics covered by Mr S [....]
2 in his evidence and crucially not disputed were: (a) the chronology
of events; (b)
that he had never complained to the hospital staff of
tonsillitis and that he had not been informed that the child was
being treated
for tonsillitis; (c) that the only medication which he
had received to administer to the child was Panado which had been
given
to him on 25 January 2012; (d) that he had returned to the
Rahima Moosa Hospital on 2 February 2012 with the child to have the
backslab removed but had been told to return on 14 February 2012; and
(e) that he had been referred to a number of other hospitals
but the
surgery was ultimately performed at the Rahima Moosa Hospital.
[10]
The following constitutes a summary of the
relevant proven facts and sequence of events.
The
date of the injury – 22 January 2012
[11]
Mr
S [....] 2’s evidence that the injury occurred on 22 January
2012 was left unchallenged. I therefore accept it as being
correct
[2]
.
The
Rahima Moosa Hospital notes, on the other hand, are at best
contradictory and cannot be relied on to determine the date of the
injury. For example, the reference in the hospital records dated, 28
January 2012, to an injury “
two
days ago”
(i.e. on 26 January 2012) is contradicted by the hospital records of
14 February 2012, which indicate the date of the injury as
31 January
2012. Moreover, the hospital records of 15 February 2012 record the
date of injury as 1 February 2012 and the progress
report of 14
February 2012 refers to an injury to the left ankle “3 weeks
ago” (i.e. 24 January 2012). Mr S [....]
2’s testimony
that the injury occurred on 22 January 2012 is therefore the only
admissible and reliable evidence before the
court.
Visit to hospital –
25 January 2012
[12]
Mr S [....] 2 testified that he took the
child to hospital for the first time on 25 January 2012 and that the
child was given Panado.
His evidence on
this aspect was left unchallenged.
[13]
Even though no hospital records exist
of this visit, Dr Eltringham
,
Dr Nair and Dr Radionova conceded that records often get lost or
misfiled and that the unavailability of records does not support
the
conclusion that Mr S [....] 2 did not visit the hospital on that date
with his child.
[14]
Mr S [....] 2’s evidence of the
first visit to hospital on 25 January 2012 was rejected by the Court
a quo
on
the basis of the existence of a “
casualty
registration book”
, which
according to Dr Eltringham could have confirmed a visit on 25 January
2012. The Court
a quo
accepted the testimony of Dr Eltingham that he thoroughly perused all
the hospital records and could find no documents confirming
a visit
to the hospital on 25 January 2012. However, at no point during his
evidence did Dr Eltringham testify that he perused
the “
casualty
registration book”.
Nor was the
“
casualty registration book”
produced to confirm, by way of example,
the visits on 28 and 31 January 2012 or the lack of a record of the
visit on 25 January
2012. Dr Eltringham clearly did not go through
all the hospital records as thoroughly as he indicated he did. Had he
done so, he
would
inter alia
not have testified in chief that Mr S [....] 2 had decided to take
the child to the Charlotte Maxeke Hospital instead of the Helen
Joseph Hospital, and that the surgery on 15 February 2012 was
performed at Helen Joseph Hospital. The hospital records clearly
documented that the child was referred to Charlotte Maxeke Hospital
on 14 February 2012, later to Helen Joseph Hospital and finally
back
to Rahima Moosa Hospital where the surgery was performed on 15
February 2012. Dr Eltringham was constrained to concede, during
cross-examination, that his evidence on these aspects was incorrect.
Visit to hospital on
28 January 2012
[15]
The hospital records of 28 January 2012
confirm that the child was given Panado. This supports Mr S [....]
2’s evidence of
a consultation on 25 January 2012 when the
child was given Panado.
Visit to hospital on
31 January 2012
[16]
Mr S [....] 2 testified that he was called
home from work to take the child to hospital for X-rays on 31 January
2012 as the condition
of his ankle which was covered in a backslab
was deteriorating.
Visit to hospital on 2
February 2012
[17]
Mr S [....] 2 testified that he and the
child visited the hospital again on 2 February 2012 because the
child’s leg, which
was covered in a backslab was more swollen,
shiny and looked as if the blood was not circulating. He requested a
nursing sister
to remove the backslab, but she refused and turned
them away. Mr S [....] 2 testified that the nursing sister did not
make an entry
in the hospital file at the time of that visit. He
testified that the reference in the hospital note to the right ankle
was inaccurate
as the backslab was on the child’s left ankle.
He also said that he did not receive medication for the child on that
visit
to the hospital.
[18]
The casualty note of Dr Nair that the
child presented with fever, vomiting and diarrhoea for one day was
not canvassed with Mr S
[....] 2 during cross-examination at all.
Although it was suggested to Mr S [....] 2 that a doctor saw the
child on 2 February
2012, it was not put to him that the prescription
chart and the ticks made on it, indicated that he must have received
medication.
There are no grounds to reject Mr S [....] 2’s
evidence that he did not receive the medication. The process involved
in dispensing
medication to patients at the Rahima Moosa Hospital was
not canvassed with Mr S [....] 2 in cross-examination at all. What’s
more is that the respondent failed to present any direct evidence
that the medication was dispensed to Mr S [....] 2.
[19]
The
truth of the contents of the hospital records was not admitted and as
such, it constituted inadmissible hearsay evidence
[3]
.
Both the child and his mother were available to give evidence at the
hearing had the respondent disputed Mr S [....] 2’s
evidence
that they had received no medication.
[20]
Dr Nair testified that she had examined the
child and referred to her clinical notes. She explained the process
followed in the
casualty unit as consisting of a preliminary
examination of the patient by the sisters on duty, followed by an
examination by a
doctor in a consulting room. Since this procedure
was not canvassed with Mr S [....] 2 during his cross-examination, I
do not know,
amongst other things, whether he would have agreed with
the process, whether the child was taken to the consultation room and
if
so, whether Mr S [....] 2 accompanied the child to the
consultation room.
[21]
The Court
a
quo
accepted Dr Nair’s evidence
that the ankle was not a presenting complaint when she saw the child
on 2 February 2012. Dr Nair
stated that it was not a complaint
because had it been, she would have noted it on the clinical records.
She, however, had no independent
recollection of what had happened.
It was not suggested to Mr S [....] 2, in cross-examination, that the
child’s ankle was
not a presenting complaint on 2 February
2012. Nor was it suggested to him that the child presented with
totally different and
unrelated complaints (vomiting and diarrhoea)
on that visit. The sister who attended to the child, on 2 February
2012, was not
called as a witness by the respondent despite the fact
that she entered the child’s vital signs on the hospital
records.
No reasons were given by the respondent for why she was not
called. We therefore accept the version of Mr S [....] 2 on this
aspect.
[22]
Dr Nair’s evidence was that she
could not remember whether she saw Mr S [....] 2 and the child, or
whether she only saw the
child or whether she had introduced herself
to him/them. She confirmed that the sister in attendance, in some
circumstances, would
do the undoing of bandages to remove a backslab
.
There is thus some support in the procedure (assuming it to be
correct and followed on the day) that Mr S [....] 2 requested the
sister on duty to remove the backslab.
[23]
Applying
the principles distilled in
Stellenbosch
Farmer’s Winery,
[4]
I
am of the view that the court
a
quo
ought to have concluded that Mr S [....] 2’s evidence contained
no internal contradictions, no external contradictions with
what was
pleaded or with the established facts or with his own extra-curial
statements and actions. It ought to have furthermore
concluded that
there was nothing improbable about his evidence and that the calibre
and cogency of his performance did not deserve,
and did not attract,
criticism.
[24]
In my view, the court
a
quo
erred in finding that Mr S [....]
2’s evidence should be treated with caution. Acceptance of Mr S
[....] 2’s evidence
does not necessarily lead to a conclusion
that the clinical records and prescriptions of 28 January 2012 and 2
February 2012 were
falsifications, particularly in light of the
respondent’s failure to cross-examine Mr S [....] 2 on these
issues. The prescriptions
could have been written out without Mr S
[....] 2 being informed of them, and without issuing the prescribed
medication to him.
The consultation of Dr Nair on 2 February 2012
could have been performed in his absence and without his input. The
failure of the
respondent to deal fully with the aforementioned
issues during cross-examination of Mr S [....] 2 should have the
normal consequences
for the party who failed to comply with the rules
of cross-examination.
[25]
I thus find that the Court
a
quo
erred in finding that Mr S [....] 2
was clearly biased because he blamed the hospital for his son’s
present condition.
The visit to hospital
on 14 February 2012
[26]
Dr Radionova’s evidence on the reason
for the referral of the child on 14 February 2012 to another hospital
was unsatisfactory.
She testified that she referred the child to
Charlotte Maxeke Hospital because she thought he had a soft-tissue
injury and would
have referred him to Helen Joseph Hospital if she
thought he had a bone injury. The referral was not necessary because
Dr Eltringham
testified that there was a clinical specialist on duty
at the Rahima Moosa Hospital, who could have been called to attend to
the
child there. Mr S [....] 2’s evidence was that the child
was referred, from Helen Joseph Hospital, back to Rahima Moosa
Hospital
because the doctors at Helen Joseph Hospital said that the
damage was done and the child should be treated by the Rahima Moosa
Hospital. The child in fact received the indicated surgical
intervention required at Rahima Moosa Hospital. Dr Eltringham had to
concede in cross-examination that his evidence in chief, that the
surgery was not performed at Rahima Moosa Hospital at that time,
was
incorrect.
[27]
Dr Radionova’s evidence about
“unsatisfactory compliance” as referred to in her
referral note to Charlotte Maxeke
Hospital was shocking. It was
incorrect and without any factual foundation. There was absolutely no
reason for her to blame the
condition of the child’s leg, on 14
February 2012, on an untruthful allegation of non-compliance on the
part of Mr S [....]
2.
[28]
Mr S [....] 2 testified that he was told on
31 January 2012 to return in two weeks’ time, and that he was
not assisted when
he returned two days later on 2 February 2012. On 2
February 2012 he was again told to come back in two weeks’ time
as he
had been advised on 31 January 2012. It was reasonable for Mr S
[....] 2 in such circumstances not to return to hospital again
shortly after 2 February 2012, but to follow the direction of those
with medical expertise.
[29]
Nothing on the evidence before us indicates
any improvement in the child’s condition before 2 February 2012
nor that it had
deteriorated between 2 February 2012 and 14 February
2012. We accept that the evidence shows that Mr S [....] 2 was
instructed
to wait 14 days before returning.
The tonsillitis
[30]
It is common cause that none of the
clinical notes referred to complaints relating to a sore throat or
tonsillitis. Mr S [....]
2’s evidence was that the child
attended at hospital on each occasion for complaints relating to a
progressively worsening
ankle injury. Mr S [....] 2 testified that he
knows what tonsillitis is because the child had tonsillitis before
the incident.
According to him however, the child did not have any
complaints relating to a sore throat on 28 January 2012 and he did
not take
the child to hospital for treatment of tonsillitis. Mr S
[....] 2 testified that he was also not told at the hospital on 28
January
2012 that the child had tonsillitis. It was not suggested to
Mr S [....] 2, during cross-examination, that the child had in fact
been diagnosed at hospital with tonsillitis and that he had been
treated on both 28 January 2012 and 2 February 2012 for this
complaint.
[31]
On 2 February 2012 the recorded
complaints were “
fever, vomiting
and diarrhoea”
. The fever,
vomiting and diarrhoea on 2 February 2012 could have been caused by
the tonsillitis or by the osteomyelitis, yet no
attention was given
on 2 February 2012 to the ankle.
[32]
If the child had symptoms as result of the
ankle injury and not as result of tonsillitis, it does not matter
that the correct treatment
was prescribed by the respondent for the
tonsillitis (treating a condition which is not the problem, does not
take the matter further
)
.
The symptoms on 2 February 2012 (vomiting and diarrhoea) could have
been caused by either tonsillitis or osteomyelitis, but Dr
Nair
stopped at tonsillitis and failed to consider the differential
diagnosis of osteomyelitis. The child was treated for the wrong
thing. The tonsillitis was a red herring and the employees at the
Rahima Moosa Hospital should have seen it for what it was. The
negligence lies in the fact that the ankle injury was not properly
attended to on 31 January 2012 and the osteomyelitis was missed
on 2
February 2012.
The Evaluation of the
opinions of the two orthopaedic surgeons
Dr Eltringham
[33]
Dr Eltringham did not consult with Mr S
[....] 2 or the child and considered only the medical records (the
truth of the contents
of which had not been admitted). Relevant
information outside of the hospital records has to be taken into
account by the experts,
e.g. whether the prescribed medication was
dispensed or not, whether the child had worsening complaints relating
to the ankle at
each subsequent visit to the hospital or not, whether
the clinical notes are comprehensive and complete or not etc. Dr
Eltringham
conceded that an expert is obliged to take into account
all the relevant information, but he clearly failed to do so.
[34]
Dr Eltringham testified in chief that there
was no growth plate arrest even though he personally never examined
the child. In cross-examination
he conceded that the measurements of
Dr Versfeld at the child’s first and second assessments
respectively, were correct.
He ultimately conceded that there was
growth plate arrest (the leg length discrepancy increased).
[35]
Dr Eltringham’s evidence was not the
product of his independent expert view, uninfluenced as to form or
content by the exigencies
of litigation. Dr Eltringham testified in
chief that the casualty officers at Rahima Moosa Hospital did not
have an after-hours
facility to call upon a specialist for a second
opinion. Although this evidence was favourable to the respondent
because it justified
the referral of the child away from the Rahima
Moosa Hospital on 14 February 2012, it was factually incorrect. In
re-examination,
Dr Eltringham testified that the orthopaedic surgeon
on call at Helen Joseph Hospital covers both Helen Joseph and Rahima
Moosa
Hospital. He also confirmed that there was an orthopaedic
surgeon available on call at Rahima Moosa Hospital on the evening of
14 February 2012. He testified in chief that the Rahima Moosa
Hospital does not provide surgical services to children and that they
are all referred to the Helen Joseph Hospital for orthopaedic
surgery. This evidence was also favourable to the respondent because
it justified the referral of the child away from the Rahima Moosa
Hospital on 14 February 2012, but it was also incorrect. In
cross-examination, Dr Eltringham conceded that he had misinterpreted
the records which had been made available to him, and that
the
surgery had been performed at the Rahima Moosa Hospital on 15
February 2012. Dr Eltringham testified that Mr S [....] 2 chose
to
take the child on 14 February 2012 to Charlotte Maxeke Hospita
l
and in cross examination added “…
because
it would be quicker…”
. In
cross-examination it was shown, on the basis of the hospital records
that Dr Eltringham had at his disposal and had perused
thoroughly,
that there was no basis for his conclusion which was factually
incorrect. Significantly, Mr S [....] 2 took the child
to Charlotte
Maxeke Hospital because he was referred there and not because he
chose to. Dr Eltringham conceded that he had made
a mistake.
[36]
Dr Eltringham ignored the allegation that
the child had been treated for the first time on 25 January 2012. He
testified that he
refused to take this into account because there was
no documented evidence that the child presented to the hospital
before 28 January
2012. This despite Dr Eltringham having agreed in
the joint minute between him and Dr Versfeld that the child had
presented at
the Rahima Moosa Hospital on approximately 25 January
2012, with a history of having bumped his ankle approximately 3 days
earlier
(i.e. on 22 January 2012). Dr Eltringham unsuccessfully
attempted to soften the agreement reached in the joint minute by
testifying
that he was happy with the agreement because of the
“approximation”
.
[37]
When Dr Eltringham was confronted, in
cross-examination, with the suggestion that he was not an objective
and unbiased expert witness
because he did not want to consider the
evidence of Mr S [....] 2 that the injury occurred on 22 January 2012
and that the first
visit to hospital was on 25 January 2012, Dr
Eltringham stated that he had listened to the evidence, had read the
transcript and
that Mr S [....] 2, in his view, had not specified any
dates and was very vague. On the contrary, the transcript of the
proceedings
reveals that Mr S [....] 2 had specified the dates and
was not vague at all. Dr Eltringham, in our view, had misconceived
his role.
[38]
The
Court
a
quo
in our view, failed to have due and proper regard to the legal
principles relating to the evaluation of expert evidence.
[5]
On
a proper consideration of the available evidence the court
a
quo
failed to have regard to the fact that Dr Eltringham based his
opinion almost exclusively on hearsay evidence.
[6]
[39]
Dr
Eltringham ought to have based his opinion on the following facts:
(a) the injury had occurred on 22 January 2012; (b) Mr S [....]
2 had
taken the child to the Rahima Moosa Hospital on 25 January 2012; (c)
the child experienced worsening complaints relating
to his left ankle
at every subsequent visit to the Rahima Moosa Hospital including the
visit on 2 February 2012
[7]
;
(d)
the child had complaints relating to his left ankle at the time of
his visit to the Rahima Moosa Hospital on 2 February 2012;
(e) if the
medication had been prescribed per the prescription chart on 28
January 2012 and 2 February 2012 and had been dispensed
to Mr S
[....] 2, it did not find its way to the child; (f) the child’s
symptoms did not get better from 2 February 2012
onwards
.
Dr Versfeld
[40]
The Court
a
quo
erred in finding that Dr Versfeld’s
views are not capable of withstanding logical analysis and therefore
not reasonable.
The facts relied upon by Dr Versfeld were established
at the trial and his conclusions are capable of logical support.
[41]
It was established at the trial that: the
injury had occurred on 22 January 2012; Mr S [....] 2 had taken the
child to hospital
for the first time on 25 January 2012; the
condition of the ankle deteriorated from the 28 to 31 January 2012
and again from the
2
nd
of February 2012; the effective treatment in the form of surgery was
performed only on 15 February 2012 at the Rahima Moosa Hospital.
[42]
Dr Versfeld stated that there was a delay
in treatment for more than 3 weeks from the date of the injury (22
January 2012 to 15
February 2012).
[43]
Factual causation was common cause between
the parties: Osteomyelitis in its early stages is completely
treatable and the success
rate if treated rapidly and correctly is
about 90%.
[44]
Dr Versfeld opined that the outcome in the
child’s case was jeopardized by the massive delay in treatment.
Dr Versfeld testified
that even if the child had tonsillitis and even
if he had received the medication referred to in the hospital
records, he had nonetheless
not received appropriate treatment for
the ankle injury. The doctors ignored the patient’s complaints
relating to the ankle
and focused on the redness of the tonsils
instead.
[45]
Dr Versfeld testified that it seems that
matters had gone wrong on the 28
th
of January 2012 when the casualty officer did not take notice of the
bone injury. Matters went drastically wrong on the 31
st
of January 2012 when the injury was clearly worse. X-rays revealed no
fracture and the bone infection was probably already present.
The
casualty officer needed to escalate the matter on 31 January 2012 and
the diagnosis of a sprained ankle was illogical. On the
following
visit (2 February 2012), the backslab was not taken off which was
totally unacceptable and unforgivable. All that the
casualty officer
at the Rahima Moosa Hospital had to do was to escalate the matter to
the orthopaedic or paediatric specialist.
Dr Versfeld stated that the
casualty officer should have told Mr S [....] 2 to come back with the
child the following day or he
could have put the child in the ward
for observation or he could have picked up the phone and called the
orthopaedic surgeon. On
2 February 2012, they at least had to examine
the injured ankle. It was as easy as just unravelling the bandage. He
said that if
the casualty officer was unable to work out what was
wrong, she should have escalated the matter. If she had escalated the
matter,
it would have been apparent that something was wrong with the
ankle.
[46]
Of considerable significance is Mrs
Schoeman’s evidence, which was neither elicited during her
evidence in chief nor during
her cross-examination. She volunteered
the fact that she knew the child had returned to the Rahima Moosa
Hospital on 2 February
2012 with the specific request for the
backslab to be removed and that he had not been helped.
[47]
Dr Versfeld testified regarding the records
of 31 January 2012 that the note contained no recordal of an
examination or assessment.
Dr Versfeld maintained that the casualty
officer should have examined the child and recorded her findings. The
absence of a fracture
should have alerted the doctor that something
was not right and she should have escalated the matter.
[48]
Dr Versfeld testified regarding the records
of 2 February 2012. He opined that the history, diagnosis and
treatment on 2 February
2012 were totally unreasonable. There were
complaints relating to the left leg, but they did not examine the
leg. They referred
to the right leg whereas the backslab was on the
left leg. Mr S [....] 2 testified that there was no tonsillitis. The
complaint
of the left lower limb is not recorded. There is an
incomplete history. The child presented at the hospital with a
backslab and
crutches. The ankle was worse than the previous visit.
There is no recorded history of the leg (the two previous visits on
28 and
31 January 2012). Osteomyelitis and antibiotics would explain
the vomiting and diarrhoea. Dr Versfeld maintained that there should
have been a reference in the complaints relating to the history of
the ankle injury, X-rays 3 days earlier and the backslab being
applied then.
[49]
Regarding the tonsillitis, Dr Versfeld
testified that “ …
you are
very unlikely to have tonsillitis that is causing the problem we have
here without the sore throat.
”.
Dr Versfeld testified on the basis of the evidence of Mr S [....] 2
that “…
the child’s
main problem was not the tonsils
”.
Dr Versfeld distinguished between the common general features of
tonsillitis and osteomyelitis (infection) and the local
features of
tonsillitis and osteomyelitis (inflamed tonsils for tonsillitis
versus temperature and redness at the sight of the
osteomyelitis). Dr
Versfeld testified that the local features of osteomyelitis would not
be influenced by the tonsillitis, but
the general features would be
more severe with osteomyelitis than with tonsillitis. The failure to
remove the backslab on 2 February
2012 and to examine the ankle meant
that the casualty doctor failed to consider the local features that
would have been present
with osteomyelitis (temperature / warmth and
redness at the sight of the osteomyelitis).
[50]
In our view, Dr Versfeld considered all the
material facts and remained objective and unbiased. His opinions were
founded on sound
and logical reasoning. He made reasonable
concessions when required to which evidences his independence. Dr
Versfeld conceded that
the ticks on the prescription chart may have
the meaning proffered by Dr Eltringham, but that he had not heard
direct evidence
in that regard. He also conceded that the medication
prescribed on 2 February 2012 was reasonable on the basis (only) of a
diagnosis
of bilateral tonsillitis. He also conceded that if only the
clinical note of 2 February 2012 was considered, and the evaluation
was based entirely on that, then a correct diagnosis of bilateral
tonsillitis plus gastroenteritis would have been made. Dr Versfeld,
however, emphasised that if all the proven facts had been considered
including that the child presented at the hospital on 28
January 2012 with a sore ankle (when
it was not deemed necessary to do ankle x-rays); that he returned to
hospital on the 31
st
of January 2012 (when x-rays were done and a backslab was applied);
and that he returned to hospital again on the 2
nd
of February 2012 with ankle complaints (according to Mr S [....] 2),
then a correct diagnosis of osteomyelitis would have been
made much
earlier.
[51]
Dr Eltringham’s discussion of the
note of “++ medial malleolus” which forms part of the
epiphysis and does not
correlate to the subsequent diagnosis or point
of location of osteomyelitis was never canvassed with Dr Versfeld in
cross-examination.
The court
a quo
was, therefore, not given the benefit of Dr Versfeld’s response
thereto. Dr Eltingham, in any event, testified that the reference
to
the medial malleolus was “
more of
a generic description for the region of the symptoms”
and not localised “
to an area the
size of a thumbnail”
. On Dr
Eltringham’s understanding of the reference to the medial
malleolus, the tenderness could just as well have been slightly
above
the medial malleolus, which could also be consistent with the
subsequent osteomyelitis.
Negligence of the
respondent
[52]
The
Court is not bound by expert opinion, but must decide the issue of
whether the conduct complied with the standard of conduct
of the
reasonable practitioner in the particular professional field on the
basis of a logical analysis of all the available facts
[8]
.
Conduct on 31 January
2012
[53]
The symptoms were getting progressively
worse. If the symptoms were improving or not deteriorating, the child
would not have been
taken for X-rays on 31 January 2012.
[54]
Mr S [....] 2 testified that the child’s
ankle was a little swollen and that he limped a little after the
injury on 22 January
2012, but he thought that it was a minor injury,
not justifying a hospital visit. He took the child to hospital after
work on 25
January 2012 because his ankle was swollen and he cried of
pain (he received Panado). He took the child to hospital again on 28
January 2012 because his ankle was more swollen and the child was
still crying with pain. Mr S [....] 2 was called home from work
on 31
January 2012 to take the child to hospital for X-rays because he was
still in terrible pain. The child’s ankle was
very painful and
swollen on 2 February 2012.
[55]
The casualty records of 31 January 2012 do
not reflect that any of the child’s vital signs were taken. The
Court
a quo
failed to have proper regard to Dr Versfeld’s testimony about
an ankle injury that was getting progressively worse, a third
visit
to the hospital in a period of seven days; nine days after the ankle
was injured on 22 January 2012. It is common cause that
had the vital
statistics of the child been checked and recorded on 31 January 2012,
it would have provided details about the status
of the child’s
pyrexia and whether there was an improvement or deterioration of the
infection noted on 28 January 2012.
[56]
The negative results of the x-rays failed
to give a proper explanation for the deterioration of the ankle and
further investigation
was required – perhaps by merely checking
the child’s vital signs. If the vital signs had been checked
and if the vital
signs indicated persistent infection or a worsening
of the infection, further investigation and treatment would have been
reasonable.
[57]
As conceded by Dr Eltringham, there was a
worsening of the ankle injury from the 28
th
of January 2012 (when he could walk) to the 31
st
of January 2012 (when a backslab was
applied), and with hindsight it was reasonable for Dr Versfeld to
hold that the casualty officer
should have noted that something was
seriously wrong, and should have escalated the case. On the basis
that it was the third visit
to hospital, it was put to Dr Eltringham
that the injury was not attended to properly. Dr Eltringham replied:
“I do not know;
I do not know the answer.”
[58]
From these facts and circumstances, I draw
the ineluctable conclusion that the failure to have attended to the
ankle injury properly
was unreasonable.
The Conduct on 2
February 2012
[59]
On the established evidence, it is
clear that Dr Nair failed to pay due and proper attention to the
ankle at the time of her consultation
on 2 February 2012.
She agreed that it is important in the
workup of a patient to obtain a proper history, that something may be
missed if a full history
is not obtained, that it is important to
examine a patient properly to deal with the totality of the history
obtained, and that
it is logical that something may be missed if the
examination does not tie in with the complaints and the history
received. Dr
Nair conceded that she was aware that the child visited
the hospital, at least, on two earlier occasions namely, on 28 and 31
January
2012 for an ankle injury, and that she had the hospital
records relating to those consultations available to her when she
consulted
with the child on 2 February 2012.
[60]
Dr Nair conceded in cross-examination that
osteomyelitis could also have caused the diarrhoea and the fever that
she referred to
in her clinical note of 2 February 2012. It is clear
that in trying to find a source for the infection on 2 February 2012,
Dr Nair
failed to pay any attention to the child’s injured
ankle. She testified that she did not take the backslab off on 2
February
2012, but conceded that it would have been easy to do so,
and if she had done so she would have seen a blister if the backslab
was fitted too tightly and if there was a blood circulation problem;
and that she would have been able to feel if the ankle was
warm to
touch which would have indicated an infection
.
Dr Nair further conceded in cross-examination that she did not ask
the child how his ankle was on 2 February 2012 and that she
did not
deal with and exclude the deferential diagnosis of osteomyelitis.
[61]
The ankle injury was an obvious
possible source of infection. It would have been easy and reasonable
to remove the backslab and
inspect the ankle to consider whether the
ankle was the source of the infection, bearing in mind the evidence
of Dr Eltringham
that the only difference between the presenting of a
soft tissue injury and osteomyelitis, would be the presence of a
temperature
and other signs of an infection (swelling and
inflammation with warmth and sometimes redness).
[62]
Dr Versfeld testified that it was totally
unreasonable not to consider the ankle again during the consultation
on 2 February 2012.
The backslab should have been removed to
investigate. The Court
a quo
erred in stating that it was Dr Versfeld’s view that “
the
leg symptoms seemed to have been deteriorating”
during
the period from 22 January 2012 to 2 February 2012 – that was
the undisputed evidence of Mr S [....] 2 (a deterioration
from 28 to
31 January 2012 was accepted by Dr Eltringham). The Court
a
quo
erred in stating that Dr Versfeld
“
made certain material factual
assumptions that have not been established”
.
The facts relied upon were established by the uncontested and
undisputed evidence of Mr S [....] 2. It is common cause that the
backslab was not removed on 2 February 2012 even though it would have
been simple and easy to do so.
Conclusion in respect
of negligence
[63]
As alluded to earlier in the judgment, the
conduct of the attending nurses and doctors of the hospital should be
considered against
the standard of conduct expected from the
reasonable hospital based on a logical analysis of the available
facts. The test is ultimately
how reasonable nurses and medical
doctors in the position of the respondent’s employees would
have conducted themselves.
[64]
The employees of the respondent failed to
act reasonably by: not investigating further and/or by not at least
checking and recording
the vital signs of the child on 31 January
2012 and by overlooking an obvious risk on 2 February 2012 when they
failed to enquire
about and investigate the status of the child’s
ankle injury.
Conclusion
[65]
The child was taken repeatedly to the
Rahima Moosa Hospital for the specific complaint of a sore ankle.
Instead of addressing the
complaint, the child was treated for
tonsillitis and his father, Mr S [....] 2 was not even told about the
treatment. Significantly,
there was no evidence on record of the
child having had a sore throat.
[66]
On the 31
st
of January 2012, Mr S [....] 2 was told to return in 14 days. It is
on the 31
st
of January 2012 that the casualty officer should have made the
referral upwards or admitted the child for observation or told him
to
return the following day or sought the assistance of an orthopaedic
surgeon.
[67]
The defendant’s nursing sister who
had attended to the child on 2 February 2012 was not called to
testify. By virtue of the
dispute regarding the presenting complaint
(ankle or tonsils), one would have expected her to be called as a
witness. She was not.
[68]
Although only instructed to bring the child
in 14 days, Mr S [....] 2 returned on 2 February 2012 with a request
that the backslab
be removed. Dr Nair did not do so. Although it was
the fourth time in 9 days that the child had been to the hospital,
the medical
staff at the Rahima Moosa Hospital did not remove the
backslab on the 2
nd
of February 2012 and did not investigate the status of the ankle
injury. I consider this conduct to be unreasonable. I accordingly
find that the respondent’s conduct was negligent and that the
court a quo erred in not finding the respondent liable.
Order
[69]
I accordingly make the following order:
69.1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
69.2.
T
he order of the
court
a quo
is
set aside and replaced with the following order:
69.2.1.
The
Defendant is liable for the Plaintiffs’ agreed or proven
damages;
69.2.2.
The
Defendant is ordered to pay the costs of suit to date hereof, to be
agreed upon or taxed, as between party and party, which
costs shall
include:
69.2.2.1.
The costs reserved on 24 April 2017.
69.2.2.2.
The costs attendant upon the employment of
counsel, including the full day fees of counsel for 26 to 30 November
2018, 7 December
2018, 25 to 26 March 2019, 12 April 2019 and 24 May
2019.
69.2.2.3.
The reasonable costs of the appointment of
the Curator
Ad Litem
herein
and the reasonable costs of the Curator
Ad
Litem.
69.2.2.4.
The reasonable travelling costs incurred by
the Plaintiffs in attending the Plaintiffs’ medico-legal
appointments and in respect
of the trial herein, including the
necessary consultations in preparation for trial, as allowed by the
Taxing Master.
69.2.2.5.
The costs of the medico-legal reports,
follow-up medico-legal reports and addendum reports, and the
reasonable preparation and reservation
fees of Dr Versfeld.
69.2.2.6.
The reasonable costs pertaining to the
consultations with the Curator
Ad Litem
to obtain instructions; and
69.2.2.7.
The costs of the Plaintiffs’ attorney
attending any consultations with witnesses in preparation for Trial,
including consultation
with the expert.
69.2.3.
The balance of the issues relating to the
quantification of the damages of the Plaintiffs is postponed
sine
die.
I
Opperman
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
Counsel
for the Appellant: Adv J.F. Grobler S.C.
Instructed
by: Friedman Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondent iro heads of argument: Adv Pieter Pauw S.C and Adv
R Mansingh
Counsel
for the Respondent at the hearing: Adv R Mansingh
Instructed
by: The State Attorney
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2022
Date
of judgment: 12 August 2022
[1]
R
v Dhlumayo and Another
,
1948 (2) SA 677
(A) at 705 – 706.
[2]
President
v The Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union and Others
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC)
,
par
61, 63, 64 and 65; See too
Crots
v Pretorius
2010
(6) SA 512
(SCA), par 15 on 516.
[3]
Visser
v Life Direct Insurance Limited
(1005/130)
[2014] ZASCA 193
(28 November 2014)
[4]
Stellenbosch
Farmers’ Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell et Cie and
Others
2013 (1) SA 11
(SCA)
,
par 5 on p14 and further.
[5]
Nicholson
v Road Accident Fund
2012
JDR 0672 (GSJ), par 4;
Schneider
No And Others V AA and Another
2010 (5) SA 203
(WCC), page 211E;
Michael
and Another v Linksfield Park Clinic (Pty) Ltd and Another
2001 (3) SA 1188
(SCA), paragraphs [36] to [40];
Louwrens
v Oldwage
2006 (2) SA 161
(SCA), paragraph [27]
.
[6]
Nicholson
(supra)
at para 4
[7]
Dr
Eltringham assumed that the ankle pain settled when the ankle was
immobilised on 31 January 2012, but there was no evidence
to this
effect.
[8]
Michael
(supra)
at 120D – 120E
sino noindex
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