[2025] EWHC 2025 (KB)
King's / Queen's Bench Division of the High Court

[2025] EWHC 2025 (KB)

Fecha: 31-Jul-2025

Section 16

.

86.

I start with the proposition that the law which imposed the duty to warn on the doctor has at its heart the right of the patient to make an informed choice as to whether, and if so when and by whom, to be operated on. Patients may have, and are entitled to have, different views about these matters. All sorts of factors may be at work here-the patient's hopes and fears and personal circumstances, the nature of the condition that has to be treated and, above all, the patient's own views about whether the risk is worth running for the benefits that may come if the operation is carried out. For some the choice may be easy-simply to agree to or to decline the operation. But for many the choice will be a difficult one, requiring time to think, to take advice and to weigh up the alternatives. The duty is owed as much to the patient who, if warned, would find the decision difficult as to the patient who would find it simple and could give a clear answer to the doctor one way or the other immediately.

87.

To leave the patient who would find the decision difficult without a remedy, as the normal approach to causation would indicate, would render the duty useless in the cases where it may be needed most. This would discriminate against those who cannot honestly say that they would have declined the operation once and for all if they had been warned. I would find that result unacceptable. The function of the law is to enable rights to be vindicated and to provide remedies when duties have been breached. Unless this is done the duty is a hollow one, stripped of all practical force and devoid of all content. It will have lost its ability to protect the patient and thus to fulfil the only purpose which brought it into existence. On policy grounds therefore I would hold that the test of causation is satisfied in this case. The injury was intimately involved with the duty to warn. The duty was owed by the doctor who performed the surgery that Miss Chester consented to. It was the product of the very risk that she should have been warned about when she gave her consent. So I would hold that it can be regarded as having been caused, in the legal sense, by the breach of that duty.

10.

In Correia v University Hospital of North Staffordshire NHS Trust [2017] ECC 37 at [24], the Court of Appeal (Simon LJ) described at [28] the “crucial finding” in Chester as being, that, if warned of the risk, the claimant would have deferred the operation.”

11.

In Duce v Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust [2018] PIQR P18, the Court of Appeal held that:

69 ….the majority decision in Chester does not negate the requirement for a claimant to demonstrate a "but for" causative effect of the breach of duty, as that requirement was interpreted by the majority, and specifically that the operation would have not have taken place when it did.

The approach to evaluating evidence

The claimant’s evidence