Category: Family Courts

Justice for Families News December 2009: John Hemming

Update from John Hemming, MP (Justice for Families)

Shortlink: http://wp.me/p5foE-2tc

Justice for Families News December 2009

05 December 2009

Apologies for the infrequent newsletters. In some senses we are making more progress in terms of getting systematic change. There have been a lot of media stories and we are not going to try to highlight any.

The most important campaigning issue is that of ensuring that Clayton v Clayton is not reversed. I believe that the government intend to continue increasing openness in the family courts, but the Chidlren, Schools and Families bill has the effect of reversing Clayton v Clayton.

There is an early day motion EDM 325

http://edmi.parliament.uk/EDMi/EDMDetails.aspx?EDMID=39885&SESSION=903

That this House notes that the Government has expressed a desire to increase accountability in the family courts; regrets that the Children, Schools and Families Bill as currently drafted would have the effect of increasing secrecy in the family courts; and calls on the Government urgently to draft amendments to deliver its commitment to accountability.

Please encourage people to write to their MPs to do this.

There has been a slight shift in the Court of Appeal and we have won a few cases there recently. One is this one.

http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1210.html

One strand of that is being appealed to the Supreme Court and will be taken to Europe.

The other judgments that we have won have not yet been published.

We are continuing to send cases to Europe.

Our casework for putting cases to the Court of Appeal and European Court has gone up a notch. Julie Haines is coordinating this process.

European Investigation Launched into Family Court Human Rights Abuses

We also now have a rapporteur appointed in the Council of Europe for an investigation into Human Rights in the Family Courts across Europe.

Judicial review into government insanity

An application for judicial review of the government’s policy on the basis that they got the formula wrong for the adoption target has been issued.

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This email is from Justice for Families. The Liberal Democrats have kindly agreed that Justice for Families can use their list server for free. Justice for Families, however, is not affiliated to any political party and the Liberal Democrats are not affiliated to Justice for Families.

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John Hemming blogs at: http://johnhemming.blogspot.com/

NICE Guidance on when to suspect child maltreatment (CG89)

NICE Guidance on when to suspect child maltreatment (CG89)

Parents and carers of children and young people with ME may wish to be aware that NICE Guidance on when to suspect child maltreatment was published in July:

Press Release: 22 July 2009

2009/043 NICE issues guidance to help healthcare professionals identify child maltreatment

http://www.nice.org.uk/media/9CA/D8/2009043ChildMaltreatment.pdf

http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG89

National Collaborating Centre for Women’s and Children’s Health

Commissioned by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence

July 2009

RCOG Press

Issued: July 2009

NICE Guidance on when to suspect child maltreatment (CG89)

Summary

The advice in this guideline covers the alerting features in children and young people (under 18 years) of:

  • physical, sexual and emotional abuse
  • neglect
  • fabricated or induced illness.

The guideline does not specifically look at:

  • risk factors for child maltreatment
  • the identification of child maltreatment and procedures for supporting the child or young person
  • education and information for parents or children or young people
  • training for healthcare professionals
  • child protection procedures.

Guidance documents

http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG89

Guidance
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89FullGuideline.pdf

[Page 61 for section on Fabricated or induced illness]

Quick reference guide
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89QuickRefGuide.pdf

Understanding NICE guidance PDF format
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89PublicInfo.pdf

CG89 When to suspect child maltreatment: evidence tables
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89PublicInfo.pdf

CG89 When to suspect child maltreatment: search strategies
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89PublicInfo.pdf

CG89 When to suspect child maltreatment: excluded studies
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89ExcludedStudies.pdf

Implementing this guidance

CG89 When to suspect child maltreatment: costing statement
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/CG89CostStatement.pdf

How this guidance was produced
http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/index.jsp?action=byId&o=11643&history=t

Expected review date: TBC

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and from a resource site for teachers:

http://www.teachingexpertise.com/articles/dealing-fabricated-or-induced-illnesses-3722

Dealing with fabricated or induced illnesses

What steps should you take when you believe that a pupil is displaying symptoms that are deliberately induced or fabricated? Jenni Whitehead summarises revised guidance for how schools should deal with this type of abuse, and stresses the importance of inter-agency communication…

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Related documents:

Safeguarding children in whom illness is fabricated or induced
http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_4008714

Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Child Protection Publications
http://www.rcpch.ac.uk/Policy/Child-Protection/Child-Protection-Publications

Times: I may be paranoid, but they are watching us

For information and to join/support NO2ID go to: http://www.no2id.net/

or click on

NO2ID - Stop ID cards and the database state

 

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/camilla_cavendish/article5003254.ece

From The Times

October 24, 2008

I may be paranoid, but they are watching us 

The State’s growing mania for gathering information is turning us into a nation of suspects and informers

by Camilla Cavendish

Camilla Cavendish writes: “We must not allow the Britain that we know, built on centuries of freedom, to be whittled out of existence by the sharing of “information” that is created by the State, controlled by the State, and that turns perfectly decent people into informers.”

Click here for full article

Times: Europe to begin investigation of secrecy in family courts

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article4305392.ece

The Times Business section
Thursday, July 10, 2008

Europe to begin investigation of secrecy in family courts


Sam Coates, Chief Political Correspondent, and Camilla Cavendish

Britain faces an investigation by Europe into secrecy in family courts, amid growing political pressure to overhaul the system.

The Council of Europe has stepped in after allegations that gagging laws designed to protect the rights of children are allowing miscarriages of justice and children to be removed unnecessarily from their parents.

The Times has been running a series of articles this week about the consequences of the system that keeps reporters and the public out of many family court hearings and obstructs people from seeing evidence against them or obtaining copies of judgments. Opponents of the system say that judges can be too ready to side with social workers and experts who want a child removed but whose evidence is rarely made public.

Family courts in England and Wales hear 400,000 cases a year, mostly divorces and child custody cases. In about 20,000 cases a year, however, local councils apply to remove children from parents on the ground that parents are abusive or neglectful.

The council’s investigation was initiated by Paul Rowen, the Liberal Democrat MP who is one of Britain’s representatives, and will begin in September. It could involve hearings by a committee that will take evidence and be able to visit courts.

It will come at a critical time for campaigners who are fighting to open up the system. The Government has promised to respond to a long-delayed consultation after the summer.

Three years ago the Constitutional Affairs Select Committee said that greater transparency was required and restrictions on the discussion of their cases by parents should be removed entirely.

Moves to open the courts up were quashed by Lord Falconer of Thoroton in one of his final acts as Lord Chancellor in June 2007. He stated that a survey of 200 children had shown that many would be anxious about the presence of the press in the family courts.

Evidence taken by the Children and Schools Select Committee last month heard how pregnant women who missed antenatal classes were being threatened with referral to social services. What we can do, times2, page 11

For links for all four articles by Camilla Cavendish, Letters to the Editor and links for advice and support, online survey and email your MP facilility jump to:

https://meagenda.wordpress.com/2008/07/07/family-courts-family-justice-times-coverage-070708/

 

Child Protection Issues: presentations to the APPG on ME, 2 July 2008

Ed: Please refer to Disclaimer

Issued by the ME Association

9 July 2008

http://www.meassociation.org.uk/content/view/603/70/

Child Protection Issues: presentations to the APPG on ME, 2 July 2008

We reproduce the written texts of the presentations on Child Protection Issues which were given to the All Party Parliamentary Group on ME at Westminster on Wednesday, July 2.

Presentation 1

JANE COLBY, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, THE YOUNG ME SUFFERERS TRUST

Sick children and innocent families are being caught up in a web of professional misunderstanding about ME. It seems to these families that the presumption of innocence that is enshrined in British law does not apply to them.

Proceedings are held in the Family Courts, which do not demand the same level of evidence as the criminal courts. Secrecy adds to the difficulties in these cases.

The children’s chapter of the Department of Health report of 2002, which was not widely circulated to professionals, stated:

  • In cases of CFS/ME, evidence clearly suggested of harm should be obtained before convening child protection conferences or initiating care proceedings in a family court.
  • Neither the fact of a child or young person having unexplained symptoms nor the exercising of selective choice about treatment or education constitutes evidence of abuse.

It would appear that child care professionals often do not proceed in this way; one professional’s suspicions typically have a ripple effect, influencing all the other professionals who come into contact with the child.

A great deal has been written about Munchausen’s Syndrome By Proxy (now called Factitious Induced Illness) in the child protection context. in Australia, the Queensland Appeal Court judgement of R v LM QCA 192 (2004) ruled that the term was inadmissible evidence. Holmes noted that MSBP/FII was ‘circular reasoning’ that ‘explained nothing’. That legal reasoning was adopted by the UK High Court in the Family Division (A County Council v A Mother and A Father and X, Y, Z children (2005) EWHC 31 Fam). In the case, Ryder stated that he hoped MBSP would be ‘consigned to the history books’. However, the term FII is still in use in its stead.

If a family in suspected of child abuse, the following procedure is initiated:

  • Within 24 hours: an initial decision is made about whether to pursue a child protection Section 47 investigation.
  • Within seven days: an initial assessment must be done which involves seeing the family.
  • Within 30 days: a core assessment must be done.

Thus the process moves swiftly and parents are unprepared as to how to fight it.

The Social Services Manager who advises the Trust feels that ideally, if anyone becomes the subject of a Child Protection investigation and it is not clear if the child’s symptoms are due to ME, the family should be informed of organisations that can advise and assist them.

The Department of Children, Schools and Families has published ‘Working Together to Safeguard Children’, which is the statutory guidance in relation to child protection.

There is a general theme of giving information to families who are the subject of Child Protection enquiries, except where to do so would place the child at further risk. This is subject to a fair degree of interpretation in individual cases.

In practice, it appears that families in this situation are not being adequately informed of their rights or of the procedures that are being followed.

There is another important theme of the guidance; the wishes and feelings of the child should always be sought, as should the child’s account of what has been happening to them.

In ME cases, the child may not be well enough for a detailed discussion with someone they don’t know, especially where ME-friendly procedures are not used, for example, short discussions with rest breaks. Where workers do communicate with the child, they do not always attach great weight to what the child says.

Action

The Trust takes the view that the Department of Children, Schools and Families should urgently alert Social Services professionals to the frequency of misunderstandings in cases of ME.

The Trust also recommends that a leaflet clarifying the procedures that should be adhered to by professionals in child protection investigations should be given to families under suspicion, and they should be informed of their rights.

Misunderstandings over rehabilitation

Many misunderstandings have arisen amongst professionals without specialist knowledge of ME. Physicians usually consider the term ‘ME’ as another name for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Generally, they have not read the original virology papers, the historical records of ME epidemics or patient profiles.

This has had a knock-on effect on patients and on families whose children have classic ME. The loose symptom profile of CFS means that various causes of fatigue, some of which are of mainly psychological origin and respond helpfully to graded exercise therapy, are caught under its label.

Moves to standardise rehabilitation treatment for those with ‘CFS’ have proved counter-productive for patients fitting the classic ME symptom profile. Patient surveys show that of the people with CFS who have been given graded exercise therapy (GET) the majority saw an exacerbation of illness, rather than recovery.

A number of consultants have had to apologise when their patients, who were previously sufficiently recovered to walk, became wheelchair-bound after rehabilitative therapy.

Misunderstandings over mental capacity

SPECT scans on the brain of people with ME confirm that, when mental or physical effort is made, blood flow to the brain decreases, which is the opposite of the normal pattern, where demand increases blood flow. Intellectual confusion and further illness typically result from too much effort; in practice, this can be very little effort compared with the healthy person.

Principles of interviewing people with ME include the need for the interviewer to speak slowly in order for the words to be processed into sentences, and the need to avoid saying anything else while the brain is processing the previous remark. This is because a typical severe ME sufferer recognises words but is unable to process them into meaningful sentences unless sufficient time is allowed without other distractions.

Typically also, any interview needs to be short, and should be broken into shorter sections of around 15 minutes maximum. Without such specialist techniques, the interviewer is unlikely to get a fair picture of what the patient can actually understand. In addition, the patient usually forgets words, rather like someone with a mild stroke, and may not, to start with, say exactly what they mean to say. An inappropriately long interview is virtually guaranteed to exacerbate the illness. The patient may need someone who knows them well to speak for them due to severe exhaustion.

None of this mean that a person with ME is not mentally capable of knowing how they wish to be cared for, nor where they wish to be.

Misunderstandings over parental or carer influence

Large-scale misunderstandings about parental influence exist among physicians, teachers and social workers with a poor understanding of classic ME, as professionals are not trained in this illness. The Trust’s caseload of families seeking help would suggest that these misunderstandings are on the increase.

In 1999, the Trust co-designed a questionnaire for the BCC which was sent to families whose children had ME. It received a 62% response and revealed that 7% of children from families questioned had been subject to child protection proceedings (court proceedings either threatened or carried out) and 4% had been labelled with Munchausen’s Syndrome By Proxy. National statistics at that time showed that MSBP affected just one in 100,000 families so clearly that this was a statistical anomaly. The Trust is not aware of any of these cases having, in the end, been shown to be due to parental interference with the child’s medical condition, recovery or treatment.

Several years after the BBC survey, the Trust carried out its own survey ‘Our Needs, Our Lives’ in the county of Essex, with a grant from Essex Community Foundation Local Network Fund. It revealed that 25% of families involved had faced the suggestion that parents were causing the illness, and 79% reported that doctors had misunderstood their illness as psychological. The Trust is not aware of any of these cases eventually having been found to be due to parents or to psychological factors.

These common misunderstandings appear to occur mainly because physicians and social workers have found it difficult to appreciate that severe and chronic disability would be due to a condition as benign sounding as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. They often regard it as partly psychological, either in origin, in perpetuating factors, or both. CFS is often treated as if it were a mental health problem and professionals may propose that carers have in some way caused or exacerbated the illness or sabotaged recovery, out of a personal need to keep the patient dependent. The Trust is not aware of any such suggestion having eventually been found to be the case in its own work.

The care and treatment of people with ME is greatly affected by the split in the medical profession between those who have knowledge of classic ME and the existence of subgroups of CFS, and those who do not.

It is therefore a misperception that the divide is between the medical establishment and the patient support fraternity. When the government Chief Medical Officer set up a Working Group to report on what the DoH now terms CFS/ME, I was an invited member of the Group and assisted specialist paediatricians to produce its Children’s Chapter (Department of Health 2002).

Comnon misdiagnoses/sensitivity to medication

Common misdiagnoses are: anorexia nervosa, school phobia, Pervasive Refusal Syndrome; separation anxiety.

Sensitivity to medications is common and can produce side-effects; specialist doctors recommend smaller doses and/or alternative drugs.

Jane Colby then introduced Joanna Smith.

Presentation 2

JOANNA SMITH

Ladies and Gentlemen

My name is Joanna Smith and I am a mum of 2 teenagers who are suffering from ME.

I work as a Senior Adviser for Brunel University Students’ Union and am an experienced legal adviser of many years.

I am here to tell you my story about how having children who are ill with ME can lead to the nightmare of Child Protection proceedings.

My older daughter, Patricia fell ill in 2001. It took six years for the diagnosis to arrive. Our GP said he doesn’t know anything about ME. As there are no local ME specialists, Patricia was referred to the Adolescent Health Clinic at Great Ormond Street. I was so happy- it is a world famous hospital, I assumed they’ll be able to offer proper help and support.

I was bitterly disappointed. Not only the consultant there referred to ME as a “fatigue” which is an entirely different thing, he proceeded to conduct a battery of psychological tests, spending less then 15 minutes of our 3 hour long visit on physical symptoms and needs. My daughter was struggling to sit up, answer his questions, was getting confused and had to continue without being offered a rest break and losing her ability to participate – as a consequence she has suffered a very bad relapse.

Great Ormond Street Hospital’s physiotherapist ignored Patricia’s pleas that she’d rather not get on the exercise bike because she was really exhausted and nauseous and was worried that she’d fall.

I was in despair – Great Ormond Street Hospital is not a good place for kids with ME. The consultant there would not even support our disability benefit application because, as he stated, Patricia “may recover in future” and that describing her as “incapable” would be bad for her chances of recovery..

He wrote to me to say that it is not helpful if she is thinking herself ill!

So medical side: a nightmare.

On the educational side things were not faring much better. Patricia was granted a place in one of the best High Schools in this country. Her attendance was falling, yet she has managed to stay in top sets in all core subjects. We were reduced to writing pitiful begging letters to her Head of Year, asking for assistance. I still want to cry when I think about those days.

In year 11 we realised that she will not be able to attend at all. It was like we have disappeared from the school and the LEA’s horizon. For the school – Patricia has stopped being a useful league table statistic, for the LEA – I was a nuisance. My calls went unanswered.

Throughout that year I received one call from the LEA and a few emails from the Head of Year; none offering practical support.

Patricia by then was suicidal from pain, insomnia and distress. And when I say suicidal, I don’t mean she vaguely thought about it – she actually attempted to take her life.

It took a year-long complaint, and the assistance of an educational specialist solicitor, for the Local Authority to admit to serious shortcomings in provision of education for my ill child. At first they denied any wrongdoing, prolonging my anxiety needlessly. Then they wanted to offer a few hundred pounds. Finally, they wrote to the Local Government Ombudsman to say they’d offer £3040. (That was in May – they still haven’t paid.)

Then, in February of this year, my younger daughter Emily fell ill and our Child Protection nightmare began.

After a few months of slowly deteriorating, I could not pretend otherwise – it looked like she too had ME.

Emily’s school, where I am a Governor, was not happy about her attendance, which slowed down to a halt, when she started to come home shaking and throwing up from exhaustion. They requested a diagnosis. I understood this perfectly – the school has a right to ask for it in light of a prolonged absence.

So the vicious circle started again – a GP who refused to acknowledge ME, a long wait for a paediatrician’s appointment, and the school pressuring me for medical evidence.

The school would not believe me that there is a tendency for clusters of ME in families- even when I sent scientific papers.

The letters from the school started to arrive – terse, harsh letters about deregistration and penalties.

I knew I must keep the dialogue with the school. I sent publications, which consisted of brilliant guides by Jane Colby for education professionals, I explained how these are relevant to us, I explained that, by now, I have considerable experience of ME and that Emily is definitely not well. My requests for a meeting were ignored, and when I got to speak to someone at school, I was met with barely masked scepticism.

We were visited by a Social Worker, on referral from the school – without the school notifying me about it (the lack of notification being typical in child protection procedures). The school wrote to the Social Worker – and I have seen this letter- that Emily is copying her older sister, that she does not look unwell and that she is not reporting health problems to the school nurse.

The Social Worker knew nothing about ME. I gave her a lot of information and explained that ME kids may not always look unwell (of which I have already informed the school) and that Emily, previously very active and sporty, had 6 years to copy her older sister, so why now?

The Social Worker called me a few days later to explain that there is no case to answer, the file is closed, she is happy that there is no need to continue the assessment.

Yet the worst came recently, when I was informed that, on the advice of a Child Protection Nominated Nurse the school is requesting Social Services to re-open the case. No explanation why, no information about allegations, no advice where to seek support. I was ill with shock.

The school has requested that the file is re-opened, on child protection grounds, clearly due to their lack of knowledge and understanding of ME and despite a Social Worker’s assertion that there is no need for further assessment.

The irony of it all is that one of my responsibilities as a Governor is child protection issues. Also, please note that I am talking about the same Local Authority which already admitted inadequate support in the case of my first daughter.

The school, it seems, is now prepared to ruin my professional reputation; the Principal has written to my employer and other, outside parties, and invited my employer to instigate gross misconduct procedures as I used post franking facilities -which my employer allows anyway, upon reimbursement – to send one letter to her. She also circulated my email with all its confidential details about my daughter.

The overall picture shows two children with complex neurological disease, in London, in the 21st century, without access to adequate medical assistance and without access to education. Furthermore, the level of ignorance is so shocking, that despite the wealth of knowledge about ME, Child Protection measures are still brought against families like mine.

I am sure you will agree: it is an appalling situation.

NB I would just like to add that without the support of The Young ME Sufferers Trust I don’t know how we would have coped so far.

Mary-Jane Willows, chief executive of the Association of Young People with ME, then introduced Ian Webster.

Presentation 3

IAN WEBSTER

My daughter Victoria ( ” V ” ) is severely ill with ME. She is 14 years old. She has probably had it since she was 2 years old but was only diagnosed on 2005. It took the medical profession some 10 years to make a diagnosis and clearly they had some difficulty in coming to terms with the illness. She is currently bed bound and has not been to school for 3 years.

SS were initially involved in helping V as a Child in Need but were limited in what they could offer and they dropped out of the picture very early on. In July 2007 V was designated a social worker following a referral. The referral was actually on the grounds that we were not getting adequate medical assistance at the time. Despite our best attempts to educate the social worker she had as much difficulty in coming to terms with the illness as the medical profession. By this time we had a diagnosis of ME. However the social worker either did not believe us or did not appreciate the severity of the condition.

In January 2008 V was seen by Dr. Crawley , a specialist ME consultant , for a second opinion. She devised a care plan, provided training for the local professionals involved ( although not all attended ) and offered ongoing support ( which was not taken up )

Child Protection Procedure

Initially the social worker’s involvement was low key and our relationship was workmanlike. We now have documentary evidence that she wanted to take CPP steps some time ago but was dissuaded by both V’s doctor and by her manager. However by April 2008 she had enough support from some of the professionals (non-medical) to apply to put V on the At Risk Register.

The criteria for placing a child on the at risk register are when a child is at risk of either physical or sexual or emotional abuse or neglect. The correct procedure in our case would have been to treat V as Child in Need. However we understand the reason for the proceedings was to enable the professional to have more input in the care plan. They thought they could do more to make V better. They failed to take account of or even grasp the concept of ” booming and busting.” This was explained to us by Dr. Crawley and experience has since shown that this is the key to V’s recovery. Any therapy that ignores this concept will not work and would very likely be dangerous and occasion a severe relapse in V. Dr. Crawley explained very clearly to us and the professionals that progress may be slow and needed to be taken at V’s pace with her goals at the centre of any decisions made.

There was a period of a few weeks between our being told of the proceedings and the date of the hearing. During that time we were involved in a great deal of paperwork. V was interviewed on a number of occasions by non medical professionals. This involved her expending great deal of energy contrary to the therapy recommended by Dr. Crawley.

Hearing

There was no evidence of abuse or neglect and this came out very clearly in the early the hearing. Normally at a hearing the professionals make their representations and at the end a vote is taken as to whether the child should be placed on the at risk register. In our case the police and V’s doctor both gave evidence that the case did not meet the criteria for entry on the At Risk Register and with the Chairperson’s consent no vote was actually taken. V was not placed on the Register.

Dr. Crawley had earlier written to the social worker strongly advising against the proceedings and made it clear that she would support the family should the matter proceed against her advice. We obtained a copy of the letter and gave it to Chairperson at the beginning of the hearing. The social worker never mentioned the existence of the letter. We wonder if the Chair would have been made aware of the existence of the letter if we had not been able to produce a copy. In addition V’s doctor stated that the case did not meet the relevant criteria i.e. both of V’s doctors were against the application. My impression is that the proceedings were being driven by non medical professionals. Bearing in mind that this was an illness case and that the welfare of the child is paramount this is worrying.

The hearing was administrative rather than judicial. The professionals made their representations but we could not cross examine them. Thus their representations were unchecked unless the Chairperson raised queries. We were represented by one of my business partners and V was represented by Mary-Jane Willows the CEO of AYME. Both of them put in a great deal of time and a lot of hard work on our behalf for which we are unable to adequately express our gratitude. We worked as a team and involved V. What became clear at the hearing was the fact that the professionals were not communicating either with each other or adequately with the medical professionals and were not acting as team.

The meeting was attended by a large number of people who we did not know and still do not know what their involvement was in V’s case. We calculated there were nineteen people at the hearing. As it turned out the matter was not put to a vote. However the non medical professionals outnumbered the medical professionals by approximately four to one. Thus if all the medical professionals had voted against V. being placed on the Register they could have been outvoted. We would be in the position of a child in an illness case being placed on the Register against the express advice of the medical professionals. As the welfare of the child is paramount this is worrying.

The proceedings were wholly misconceived. We won the day because

1 The Chairperson was excellent

2 Excellent representation by Mary-Jane Willows on behalf of V

3 Excellent representation by my colleague on behalf of my wife and myself

4 Dr. Crawley’s strongly worded written advice against the proceedings

5 The view of the police and V’s doctor

6 Our ability to work as a team in contrast to the approach of the professionals

Effect on V and the family

The proceedings were stressful for the family and disrupted V’s therapy. The family had to cope with an extra and unnecessary burden. Stress is known to have a detrimental effect on people suffering from ME. V has been very ill for a long time and has coped with the illness admirably. She is strong willed and coped with the proceedings very well although she should never have been put through coping with this extra burden. All she has tried to do is get better. She was told by the professionals that she was not doing enough and she now feels that the professionals do not trust her . She did not understand why , bearing in mind the nature of the illness and that she was following the recommended therapy. She asked us what had she been doing that was wrong. We told her she was not doing anything wrong and that she was complying with the care plan. The proceedings disrupted her therapy which resulted in a deterioration in her health which in turn resulted in a regression of her condition thus reversing previous periods of recovery. A great deal of time was spent on the proceedings which would have been better spent caring for our daughter.

1 Child protection proceedings should not be used in illness cases in the absence of evidence of abuse or neglect. There are insufficient checks and balances to prevent non medical professionals overriding the wishes and advice of the medical professionals.

2 There should be a presumption that the child is a Child in Need and not a “child at risk”.

3 If ME is diagnosed , or earlier if it is suspected , a service plan should be adopted involving parents and child and all relevant professionals. It is essential that the family and the professionals work as a team and trust each other. In our case the professional were not working together with disastrous results for V. If CPPs are instigated trust breaks down completely and the ability to work as a team is lost. The impact on the child and the family cannot be reversed once the damage is done and can only lead to further distrust between those who should be acting in the best interest of the child.

4 In illness cases the team leader must be a doctor with ME experience. In our case the non-medical professionals had far too much leeway in a matter in which they had too little experience or understanding.

5 In CPPs parents should have legal representation and legal aid should be made available. The decision of the hearing is too important to the welfare of the child to allow non-medical professionals to make important decisions in illness cases without being brought to account.

6 Remember that the welfare of the child is paramount.

Presentation 4

MARY-JANE WILLOWS, CHIEF EXECUTIVE, ASSOCIATION OF YOUNG PEOPLE WITH ME

AYME has supported families like the Webster’s for almost twelve years. It was hoped that after the CMO’s report in 2002 things would improve – they didn’t!

Then in 2004 AYME was involved in the development of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Guidelines. Again we were optimistic that these guidelines would take the pressure off parents, children and young people with ME and to a certain extent, for a while certainly amongst healthcare professionals, there did appear to be a shift – but not for long. In 2004 the Department for Education and Skills produced, with input from AYME, an exemplar for GP’s on CFS/ME – did anyone read it?

Finally last year we received the NICE Guidelines and however contentious some of those present believe them to be AYME has used them as a tool to fight for care for our members and have had positive outcomes. They have been a valuable tool in the fight in cases like the story you have heard to day but it still hasn’t put an end to it!

What good is all the money spent on this guidance if no one reads it or takes any notice of it, or chooses to misinterpret it!

AYME supported 37 crisis cases in the last year alone, the majority of whom were threatened with Child Protection proceedings. All of them families who were put under protracted periods of additional stress and anxiety – sometimes for many months -whilst professionals gathered information which is readily available should they choose to look in the right places.

Why?

The majority of the cases brought to our attention came from professionals in education and a few from those with a background in social care. Even when parents, advised by AYME, provide them with all of the guidance previously mentioned, they still proceeded! Again you ask why, how can that be? Well they just can’t accept that something more can’t be done. To quote several of those involved:

‘ we just want to speed up the process’, ‘get things moving’, ‘break the close bond the parents have developed with their child’ (as if that is a crime) ‘get them back to school where they belong with their peer group’.

How offensive is this for parents to hear. Don’t they know that if only it were that easy we would have a queue a mile long. These parents will do anything to help their child sometimes spending a fortune chasing miracle cures which we know don’t work. Who can blame them when only 25% of the country is provided with specialist CFS/ME Services.

Another vital point is that the Guidelines all, including NICE, make it absolutely clear that no one should be forced into a treatment program they don’t agree with. To quote Dr Crawley ‘There is no evidence base for the best way to proceed in children who are severely affected. I advised the family based on experience and the evidence for adults. However, even if the family did not engage with this, there would be no reason for this to be a child protection issue.’

How much more clear could she have been but they still chose to proceed even though Dr Crawley made it clear she would speak in court should it come to that for the family.

The necessity for a family to follow a particular course of treatment or refusal to do so, is not sufficient cause for professionals to follow this damaging route. It is my belief that this position is being exasperated by the drive and pressure in education for attendance figures to be met, and to meet targets and rate highly on league tables. Not in the best interests of the child.

Driven by these statistics in 2007 AYME chaired a working party of highly respected professionals, from health, education and social services all with a child protection background and developed ‘Child Protection Guidance for professionals in education and Social Services’. Even with all of this we continue to see a rise in cases.

Something must be done now as a matter of real urgency to stop this damaging and debilitating process from putting yet more families through an unnecessary process. For these professionals to put their energies into the genuine cases we read about daily in the press where children are abused, neglected and yet missed by those people persecuting my members. The cost of pursuing these cases could be better spent.

When I first joined AYME I supported a young person who was forced, against her and her families wishes, as a ward of court into hospital. It took 18 moths and re-mortgaging the family home at a cost of £60,000 and a High Court battle to get her home. In court nothing was ever produced, no evidence was made available to prove why this action had been taken. The understandable result is a young woman and family who have lost faith and trust in all professionals. They now struggle on alone rather than ever risk asking for help of any kind except from the charities that support them. There must never be another case like this – but there ARE even as we speak. Three as vulnerable young adults.

To close with a quote from NICE

The NICE Guidelines: ‘should be read in the context of all the recommendations and be specially tailored to suit individual choice, need and level of severity’. Throughout the document it talks about: shared decision making, collaborative relationships, taking account of preferences and experiences, the patient being in charge of the aims of the programme and the choice of programme’ and finally and most significantly ‘people with CFS/ME have the right to refuse or withdraw from any component of their care plan without this affecting other aspects of their care’.

This guidance is not being followed.

AYME calls for the following actions to be taken:

1. A directive to be issued by the RCPCH for all paediatricians to refer to the colleges’ guidelines when treating children and young people with ME.

2. ME to be included in the training of all GP’s and Paediatricians.

3. That all parents under suspicion of putting their child at risk are informed of their rights and are given the details of an organisations who can support them.

4. The cost of pursuing these cases is investigated.

Parents beware: The ONE CLICK Group commentary

In connection with the presentation on Child Protection issues by Jane Colby and Mary Jane Willows at the 2 July APPG, the ONE CLICK Group, yesterday, issued a commentary which can be read here

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are the views and opinions of the ONE CLICK Group and all enquiries in connection with this commentary should be referred to the ONE CLICK Group. The documentary evidence of the incidences referred to in this commentary, which also documents the involvement of the legal advisors to the ONE CLICK Group in relation to the incidences described, are available from the ONE CLICK site. 

Family courts, Family Justice: Times coverage, 07.07.08

Today, the Times has given over four pages of the Times2 section to a feature article by Camilla Cavendish. Today’s Times Leader column is also on the subject of Family Courts. Here are the links:

[I’m adding each day’s articles in this series to this posting as they are published.] 

Times Leader, page 2 in the main paper:
July 7, 2008

A Conspiracy of Silence

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/leading_article/article4282019.ece

_____________________________________

Times2 section, Front cover and pages 4, 5, 6 and 7 and online

Monday, July 7, 2008
Part 1: Family justice: the secret state that steals our children
Camilla Cavendish [there is to be another article, tomorrow, in Times2]

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/camilla_cavendish/article4271773.ece  

_____________________________________

Times2 section print edition and online

Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Part 2: Family courts: the hidden untouchables
In the second of our special articles, we explain how family courts operate in secrecy
Camilla Cavendish

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/camilla_cavendish/article4288255.ece  

____________________________________

Times2 section print edition and online

Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Part 3: Family justice: your word against theirs
In the third of our special articles, we look at the pernicious types of allegation that are almost impossible for parents to disprove
Camilla Cavendish

http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/families/article4295839.ece

____________________________________

Times print edition and online

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Opinion column: Justice can’t be done in secret. And here’s why

We will always try to twist the evidence to fit our theories. Especially when we are wrong

Daniel Finkelstein

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/daniel_finkelstein/article4296359.ece  

___________________________________

Thursday, Times2 print edition and online

July 10, 2008

Part 4: Family justice: what we can do to protect our children
A ten-point plan to make our courts system fairer
Camilla Cavendish

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/camilla_cavendish/article4303324.ece

____________________________________

Letters to the Editor

Time Letters July 9, 2008, print edition and online

Transparency in the family courts

Personal experiences of the family court system

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/letters/article4295693.ece  

Letters to the Editor, July 9 and 10, 2008

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/letters/article4311402.ece

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/letters/article4303836.ece  

_________________________________

Thursday, The Times Business section
July 10, 2008

Europe to begin investigation of secrecy in family courts
Sam Coates, Chief Political Correspondent, and Camilla Cavendish

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article4305392.ece

_________________________________

The Times: Leader, page 2, Saturday, July 12, 2008, print edition and online

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/leading_article/article4318599.ece 

__________________________________

Times: Letters to the Editor, Saturday July 12, 2008, print edition and online

Three letters:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/letters/article4318058.ece  

The public needs confidence in family courts
Professionals are well aware of the difficulties they face

__________________________________

Links for Times survey, resources for help and advice and an email your MP facility here:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/system/topicRoot/Family_Courts/  

Justice for Families
An enormous response to the articles in The Times highlights widespread concern over the secrecy that shrouds the family courts

Presentation by Joanna Smith, APPG on ME meeting, 2 July 2008

Following the APPG on ME meeting, 2 July, Dr Charles Shepherd published a summary of the meeting on behalf of the ME Association.  His summary can be read here and please note that his notes are not the official Minutes for this meeting:

https://meagenda.wordpress.com/2008/07/04/summary-of-appg-meeting-wednesday-2nd-july-2008/

In a presentation focussing on Child Protection issues which was given during the course of the meeting by Jane Colby, The Young ME Sufferers Trust with Mary Jane Willows, AYME, four family cases were highlighted.  In his summary, Dr Shepherd reports that “A more detailed summary of these presentations can be found on the Tymes Trust website (www.tymestrust.org) and in the next AYME magazine.”

Joanna Smith, whose own family’s experiences were highlighted as part of the presentation on Child Protection issues has kindly given permission to publish the text of her own presentation here, on ME agenda.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Presentation by Joanna Smith

All Party Parliamentary Group on ME, 2 July 2008

Ladies and Gentlemen

My name is Joanna Smith and I am a mum of 2 teenagers who are suffering from ME.

I work as a Senior Adviser for Brunel University Students’ Union and am an experienced legal adviser of many years.

I am here to tell you my story about how having children who are ill with ME can lead to the nightmare of Child Protection proceedings.

My older daughter, Patricia fell ill in 2001. It took 6 years for the diagnosis to arrive. Our GP said he doesn’t know anything about ME.  As there are no local ME specialists, Patricia was referred to the Adolescent Health Clinic at Great Ormond Street. I was so happy- it is a world famous hospital, I assumed they’ll be able to offer proper help and support.

I was bitterly disappointed. Not only the consultant there referred to ME as a “fatigue” which is an entirely different thing, he proceeded to conduct a battery of psychological tests, spending less then 15 minutes of our 3 hour long visit on physical symptoms and needs.  My daughter was struggling to sit up, answer his questions, was getting confused and had to continue without being offered a rest break and losing her ability to participate – as a consequence she has suffered a very bad relapse.

Great Ormond Street Hospital’s physiotherapist ignored Patricia’s pleas that she’d rather not get on the exercise bike because she was really exhausted and nauseous and was worried that she’d fall.

I was in despair – Great Ormond Street Hospital is not a good place for kids with ME. The consultant there would not even support our disability benefit application because, as he stated, Patricia “may recover in future” and that describing her as “incapable” would be bad for her chances of recovery..

He wrote to me to say that it is not helpful if she is thinking herself ill!

So medical side: a nightmare.

On the educational side things were not faring much better. Patricia was granted a place in one of the best High Schools in this country.  Her attendance was falling, yet she has managed to stay in top sets in all core subjects. We were reduced to writing pitiful begging letters to her Head of Year, asking for assistance. I still want to cry when I think about those days.

In year 11 we realised that she will not be able to attend at all.  It was like we have disappeared from the school and the LEA’s horizon. For the school – Patricia has stopped being a useful league table statistic, for the LEA – I was a nuisance. My calls went unanswered.

Throughout that year I received one call from the LEA and a few emails from the Head of Year; none offering practical support.

Patricia by then was suicidal from pain, insomnia and distress. And when I say suicidal, I don’t mean she vaguely thought about it – she  actually attempted to take her life.

It took a year-long complaint, and the assistance of an educational specialist solicitor, for the Local Authority to admit to serious shortcomings in provision of education for my ill child. At first they denied any wrongdoing, prolonging my anxiety needlessly. Then they wanted to offer a few hundred pounds. Finally, they wrote to the Local Government Ombudsman to say they’d offer £3040. (That was in May – they still haven’t paid.)

Then, in February of this year, my younger daughter Emily fell ill and our Child Protection nightmare began.

After a few months of slowly deteriorating, I could not pretend otherwise – it looked like she too had ME.

Emily’s school, where I am a Governor, was not happy about her attendance, which slowed down to a halt, when she started to come home shaking and throwing up from exhaustion. They requested a diagnosis. I understood this perfectly – the school has a right to ask for it in light of a prolonged absence.

So the vicious circle started again – a GP who refused to acknowledge ME, a long wait for a paediatrician’s appointment, and the school pressuring me for medical evidence.

The school would not believe me that there is a tendency for clusters of ME in families- even when I sent scientific papers.

The letters from the school started to arrive – terse, harsh letters about deregistration and penalties.

I knew I must keep the dialogue with the school. I sent publications, which consisted of brilliant guides by Jane Colby for education professionals, I explained how these are relevant to us, I explained that, by now, I have considerable experience of ME and that Emily is definitely not well. My requests for a meeting were ignored, and when I got to speak to someone at school, I was met with barely masked scepticism.

We were visited by a Social Worker, on referral from the school – without the school notifying me about it (the lack of notification being typical in child protection procedures). The school wrote to the Social Worker – and I have seen this letter- that Emily is copying her older sister, that she does not look unwell and that she is not reporting health problems to the school nurse.

The Social Worker knew nothing about ME. I gave her a lot of information and explained that ME kids may not always look unwell (of which I have already informed the school) and that Emily, previously very active and sporty, had 6 years to copy her older sister, so why now?

The Social Worker called me a few days later to explain that there is no case to answer, the file is closed, she is happy that there is no need to continue the assessment.

Yet the worst came recently, when I was informed that, on the advice of a Child Protection Nominated Nurse the school is requesting Social Services to re-open the case. No explanation why, no information about allegations, no advice where to seek support. I was ill with shock.

The school has requested that the file is re-opened, on child protection grounds, clearly due to their lack of knowledge and understanding of ME and despite a Social Worker’s assertion that there is no need for further assessment.

The irony of it all is that one of my responsibilities as a Governor is child protection issues. Also, please note that I am talking about the same Local Authority which already admitted inadequate support in the case of my first daughter.

The school, it seems, is now prepared to ruin my professional reputation; the Principal has written to my employer and other, outside parties, and invited my employer to instigate gross misconduct procedures as I used post franking facilities -which my employer allows anyway, upon reimbursement – to send one letter to her. She also circulated my email with all its confidential details about my daughter.

The overall picture shows two children with complex neurological disease, in London, in the 21st century, without access to adequate medical assistance and without access to education. Furthermore, the level of ignorance is so shocking, that despite the wealth of knowledge about ME, Child Protection measures are still brought against families like mine.

I am sure you will agree: it is an appalling situation.

NB I would just like to add that without the support of The Young ME Sufferers Trust I don’t know how we would have coped so far.

Ends

Summary of APPG meeting: Wednesday 2nd July 2008

Ed: All four transcripts of the presentations on child protection issues given to the July meeting of the APPG on ME are now available on the MEA website:

http://www.meassociation.org.uk/content/view/603/70/

Ed: This is a personal summary prepared by Dr Charles Shepherd.  These are not the official Minutes of the APPG meeting held on Wednesday 2 July 2008.  If reposting please ensure that it is clear that these are not the Minutes.

 

INFORMATION FROM THE ME ASSOCIATION

This is a summary of key points to emerge from a business meeting and the AGM of the ME All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG). The meeting was held in Committee Room 20 at the House of Commons on Wednesday 2 July 2008 from 1pm to 3pm.

The minutes are being prepared by the ME Association and will be published in due course.

PRESENT

Parliamentary:

Dr Des Turner MP (Chairman)
Andrew Stunell MP (Vice Chairman)
Tony Wright MP (Vice Chairman)
Dr Ian Gibson (Secretary)

Countess of Mar

Koyes Ahmed (Office of Des Tuner)

Secretariat:

Tony Britton (MEA)
Dr Charles Shepherd (MEA)
Sir Peter Spencer (AfME)

National and local charity representatives:

Joy Birdsey (Kent and Sussex Alternative Group)
Jane Colby (Tymes Trust)
Christine Harrison (BRAME)
Bill and Janice Kent (ReMEember)
Diane Newman (Peterborough)
Janet Taylor (Kirklees Independent ME Support Group)
Mary-Jane Willows (AYME)
Nicky Zussman (Kent and Sussex Alternative Group)

Several members of the public were also present

There were apologies from several MPs – including David Drew, Kerry McCarthy and Peter Luff.
Charity apology from Doris Jones (25% Group)

The meeting was chaired by Dr Des Turner. The Countess of Mar took over when MPs had to leave for division bells on the Finance Bill.

PRESENTATIONS ON CHILD PROTECTION ISSUES AS THEY AFFECT CHILDREN ME

The main part of the meeting consisted of presentations on the subject of child protection issues as they affect children with ME/CFS.

Jane Colby and Mary-Jane Willows outlined a long list of concerns relating to the way in which child protection conferences and child protection proceedings in the courts are being initiated and dealt with by social workers, education officials, health professionals and lawyers.

There were also two powerful presentations from parents of children with ME/CFS who had been involved in very distressing cases where suspicions and allegations had turned out to be unwarranted and unproven.

Key points to emerge from all four presentations:

There is still a great deal of professional misunderstanding about the cause/management/prognosis of ME/CFS – despite official reports from the Chief Medical Officer (CMO), the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health and NICE. In particular, important recommendations contained in Chapter 5 (section 5.2.8) of the CMO report regarding the need for evidence that is clearly suggestive of harm to be obtained before child protection conferences or care proceedings are pursued was being ignored.

The fact that a child or young person has unexplained medical symptoms, or the parents/carers of the child are exercising selective choice about treatment or education, does not constitute evidence of abuse.

Cases are often being driven by non medical professionals acting on suspicion, or the misguided aim of ‘wanting to speed up the recovery process’ and so ‘get the child back to school away from over-protective parents’. This then has a ripple effect on all other professionals who become involved in the case.

Proceedings are often held in family courts, which do not demand the same level of evidence as the criminal courts.

There is too much secrecy surrounding proceedings in court along with a presumption of guilt rather than innocence.

If child abuse is suspected the process can move very swiftly and parents are left unprepared as to how to deal with the circumstances they find themselves in.

Families are not being informed about their rights or about the procedures that are being followed.

A proper account of the feelings and wishes of the child and what has been happening to them is not being sought. All too often the children are not being listened to.

Specific action that needs to be taken:

The Department of Children, Schools and Families should urgently alert Social Service professionals to the frequent misunderstandings regarding ME/CFS.

A leaflet clarifying procedures that should be adhered to in child protection investigations should be given to any family under suspicion.

Families must be fully informed of their rights and about the procedures being taken.

Families must be informed about organisations that can advise and assist them.

During subsequent discussion the Countess of Mar added that she had been in discussion with the Inspector of Social Services to point out what was happening to children with ME but this had not produced a satisfactory result.

Summing up, Dr Des Turner described the evidence that had been presented by the parents as ‘harrowing’ and noted that ‘problems would not arise if all doctors were aware of the information in the CMO report’. Dr Turner will now make contact with the relevant ministers and pass on details of what had been presented to the APPG. He will also try to set up a ministerial meeting.

A more detailed summary of these presentations can be found on the Tymes Trust website www.tymestrust.org  and in the next AYME magazine.

Personal note: This was the APPG at its best – four excellent presentations covering key issues, personal experiences, and action that needs to be taken. The major defect was that the Department for Children, Schools and Families had been unable to send a minister (Ed Balls), or anyone else to attend the meeting. Clearly, this is an issue that the APPG will need to return to.

ORAL REPORTS

Charles Shepherd provided an update on recent developments regarding several issues that have been discussed at previous APPG meetings.

a) NICE GUIDELINE: JUDICIAL REVIEW HEARING ON 17 JUNE

After an exploratory hearing in the High Court lasting nearly two hours, Mr Justice Cranston agreed that the application for a Judicial Review of the NICE guideline on ME/CFS should proceed to a full hearing in the autumn. The legal challenge, which relates to the processes and procedures by which NICE produced their 2007 guideline, has been initiated by two named people with ME and one unnamed person.

Summary of the High Court hearing: http://www.meassociation.org.uk/content/view/590/70

b) HOUSE OF LORDS QUESTIONS TO LORD DARZI ON 2 JUNE

During House of Lords questions to Lord Darzi on 2 June the Countess of Mar asked whether his NHS review would include consideration of ME/CFS as a long term neurological condition. In response Lord Darzi stated that:

The long term conditions pathway is one of the care pathways that strategic health authorities are examining as part of the NHS next stage review. The review will increase awareness and ensure better care for people with ME/CFS and will help to support local delivery of the National Service Framework for long-term neurological conditions.

In response to a further question from Baroness Howe, Lord Darzi stated that the Government believes that ME/CFS should be classified as a neurological illness and that he would Encourage the Royal College of General Practitioners to take account of the WHO classification. There were also questions from Lords Swinfen, Elystan-Morgan and Earl Howe on children with ME and care proceedings, and one on medical education from Baroness Tonge.

Summary and transcripts: http://meassociation.org.uk/content/view/573/70

c) RCGP CLASSIFICATION OF CFS IN CURRICULUM DOCUMENT

The MEA has been in correspondence with Dr Bill Reith at the RCGP regarding their decision to include CFS (using the neurological Read Code F286) as a mental health disorder in a curriculum training document. The RCGP has agreed to examine this decision but say that their administrative processes mean that no change in position could be taken and confirmed before January 2009. The MEA is trying to fix a meeting to discuss the whole issue of ME/CFS with Dr Reith.

Exchange of correspondence with MEA: http://meassociation.org.uk/content/view/570/70

d) LORD DARZI’S REVIEW OF THE NHS

At the last APPG meeting Ann Keen, Parliamentary Under Secretary at the DoH, agreed to try and arrange a meeting between Lord Darzi, APPG members and charity representatives. Despite several approaches to Lord Darzi, no such meeting materialised.

Lord Darzi published his NHS review on Monday 30 June. Three specific recommendations that could be relevant to people with ME/CFS:

a  All patients with long-term conditions will have personal care plans.
b  Five thousand of those with long-term conditions will have pilot personal care budgets
c  NICE appraisals of new drugs and treatments will be speeded up so they take a maximum of six months rather than two years

e) STRATEGIC HEALTH AUTHORITIES CONSULTATION ON THE NHS

Christine Harrison updated the Group on developments and stressed the need for local groups to be proactive in making their views known to SHAs.

f) NHS PLUS LEAFLETS ON OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH ASPECTS OF ME/CFS

Following a joint initiative involving 23 local and national charities/organisations, Dr Ira Madan, who came to the APPG last year, has now produced revised versions of all three leaflets. These are now up on the NHS Plus website. Although not perfect the revision has incorporated a significant number of changes that were being requested by the charities and represent a significant change in content.

NHS Plus website: www.nhsplus.nhs.uk

g) DWP MEDICAL GUIDANCE FOR DLA APPLICATIONS

It is now almost a year since this revised medical guidance was published by the DWP. Without any up to date figures on numbers of refusals, appeals taking place, and successful appeals it is impossible to objectively assess the result of these changes. The MEA continues to receive anecdotal reports of people being refused DLA – both existing and new applications – but there has been a reduction in the overall number of calls and emails relating to DLA problems during 2008.

One example of correspondence to the MEA will be made available to the meeting and part of the letter read out – Until May 2008 I was on high rate mobility and medium rate care. Now I have been told I will get nothing – from someone who had lost both components of his existing DLA Award. This person also reported that after being placed on a graded exercise programme at a specialist NHS ME/CFS service this had severely increased the bone, muscle and joint pain because of too much activity. As a consequence of the way I was treated I refused to attend this service any more.

Other charity representatives reported similar experiences with DLA problems and Sir Peter Spencer referred to the large number of people still having to go to appeal, where they were often successful, in the AfME patient survey.

OTHER ITEMS

a  Dr Des Turner proposed that the APPG. should set up a group to conduct an enquiry into NHS service provision (ie assessment, diagnosis and management) for people with ME/CFS – a process that would involve taking oral evidence from all involved. A meeting with charity representatives to take this proposal forward will hopefully be arranged before the end of July.
b  The Countess of Mar proposed that there should be a meeting of all the main ME/CFS charities to establish where they agree and disagree on key issues in the hope that common ground could be established along with closer co-operation on issues where agreement exists. The Countess of Mar offered to chair this meeting.
c  It was decided to defer an AOB item from Diane Newman on the Mental Capacity Bill to the next meeting.

DATE OF NEXT MEETING

Provisionally fixed for Wednesday 8 October 2008 in Committee Room 20, House of Commons Main subject and speaker/s to be arranged.

 

ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING

All current officers were reappointed.

David Amess MP (Treasurer) was unable to attend.

Summary prepared by Dr Charles Shepherd, Hon Medical Adviser, ME Association

ENDS

Statement 12: Report, Brian Ashworth and The Orchard Centre: Part Three

Statement 12: Report, Brian Ashworth and The Orchard Centre, February 2008: Part Three


Part Three

Contacting organisations who have referred on to Mr Ashworth

It was brought to our attention, last year, that a registered charity for children with long-term health conditions or disabilities had referred individuals seeking representation for adults and children on to Mr Ashworth, in one instance within the last twelve months or so. A second organisation unconnected with ME had referred at least one individual, last year, to a third party and as a result a referral to Mr Ashworth had been made. Both organisations have been advised of the issues surrounding Mr Ashworth.

We also discussed our concerns with the Sheffield ME Group which provides support and welfare advice to sufferers of ME/CFS, who have confirmed to us that they had ceased recommending The Orchard Centre in 2003, but where there are issues relating to unresolved and continuing cases where there is, yet again, evidence of misrepresentation concerning the alleged settlement of a case and alleged financial payouts.

 

Regional ME/CFS support organisations

Since 2004, over 60 regional ME/CFS support group co-ordinators have been contacted by us in connection with The Orchard Centre and these groups continue to receive copies of our statements as they are published.

Leger M.E. support service for ME/CFS/PVMS/FMS in the Doncaster, Barnsley and Dearne Valley area:

The chair of this unregistered voluntary group, Mr Mike Valentine, has had a longstanding association with Mr Ashworth. In the past, Mr Ashworth has carried out “benefits surgeries” in conjunction with the Leger M.E. group and it is known that in some cases there have been problems in the Doncaster area associated with the standard of Mr Ashworth’s work.

In March 2005, we set certain information and material before Mr Valentine concerning Mr Ashworth and made several attempts to engage directly with Mr Valentine and his committee. To date, Mr Valentine has been unwilling to facilitate access to his committee or even provide us with the name of his committee’s Secretary in order that we might set our concerns before the committee, as a body. In June 2005, we asked Mr Valentine if he would confirm whether the Leger M.E. group was still promoting Mr Ashworth or referring members of Leger M.E. group and clients of Leger M.E.’s services to The Orchard Centre. Mr Valentine was unwilling to provide this information or to discuss our concerns.

Leger M.E. has more recently been promoting Mr Ashworth in “Pathways” – the group’s electronic newsletter which is accessible through the Leger M.E. website. On Page 9 of the Autumn ’06 edition of the group’s newsletter, Mr Ashworth is proffering advice on nutrition and the use of supplements and is now being promoted by Leger M.E. as a “private health practitioner”.

We find it very disturbing that Mr Valentine has been prepared to continue to promote Mr Ashworth in any capacity, though the Leger M.E. group, having been fully apprised by us of the many concerns surrounding Mr Ashworth and his work and that Mr Valentine should actively expose his group’s members and the wider community to an individual known to operate under bogus qualifications and whose modus operandi has had to be brought to the attention of several Trading Standards Offices around the country, CABs, the DWP, the police and other agencies.

 

National ME/CFS patient organisations

Since April 2004, we have sent copies of the statements we have published on the internet to Action for ME (AfME), The ME Association, The Association for Young People with ME (AYME) and The Young ME Sufferers Trust. All four patient organisations were asked, in 2004, for a statement regarding their organisation’s policy towards referring to/ recommending The Orchard Centre to their members or to other enquirers for inclusion in our “Dossier of Concerns”. Neither The ME Association nor Action for ME was prepared to provide us with a policy statement. Towards the end of last year, we discussed recent developments with Action for ME and certain undertakings were agreed.

Jane Colby, Executive Director of The Young ME Sufferers Trust has, in the past, referred families to The Orchard Centre. In late 2006, it was brought to our attention that a Patron of The Young ME Sufferers Trust had referred several individuals seeking advocacy in very complex legal issues on to Mr Ashworth. The Patron involved, Ms Colby, as well as a second Patron of The Young ME Sufferers Trust and an associate from a separate children’s organisation, who was reported to us as having referred on to Mr Ashworth in the past, were all contacted, last July, and selected information placed before them.

 

Local issues

Now that the Bilston Resource Centre has severed all association with Mr Ashworth we are concerned that he may focus his attention on alternative organisations within the Bilston/ Wolverhampton area – in particular, community or resource centres and churches and voluntary organisations where he might anticipate coming into contact with vulnerable individuals who are ill as well as disabled and who may also be from BME communities and others who might be seeking assistance with immigration, benefits, housing or legal issues.

For the past couple of years, Mr Ashworth has been active in various capacities within one of his local churches. Mr Ashworth’s involvement in church activities has recently been subject to review. We understand that Mr Ashworth has been associated with a number of other local community groups, including the Bilston Regeneration Forum. We have evidence that he has been using his involvement in his local community as a recruiting sergeant for The Orchard Centre and the activities he undertakes through it.

We have learned, recently, that Mr Ashworth is said to have been talking of plans for establishing a “life skills” training centre for young people operating out of a premises in Bilston; that it had been mooted that catering and IT skills would be amongst the training offered and that Mr and Mrs Ashworth were proposing that they might deliver some of this training, themselves. We are extremely concerned that Mr Ashworth might be looking to expand his interests locally and that he should apparently be considering seeking to work with young people.

 

Change of contact details

The email address orchardme.centre@virgin.net has been in use for The Orchard Centre since 1998. If you are a client of Mr Ashworth’s with an unresolved or abandoned case and have been experiencing difficulties contacting him by telephone or email please note that this email address appears to have been taken out of use and that emails sent to this address are currently being bounced by Virgin Media. Mr Ashworth is known to be making use of the following alternative email address bj400j1234@yahoo.co.uk

The dedicated residential landline telephone/Fax number 01902 494717, which had been in use for the operation by Mr and Mrs Ashworth since they first launched themselves as The Orchard M.E. Centre, in 1994, was taken out of operation last year. Mr Ashworth is now operating solely via a mobile phone and a PO Box number. For those having difficulty contacting Mr Ashworth in connection with the status of unresolved cases or concerning the return of paperwork and documents being retained by him, which he claims are being stored in commercial archive storage facilities but which may be being stored in his lock up garage, we publish his most recent mobile phone number and an alternative landline number below:

Mobile: 07892 823332 Landline: 01902 408038

It is understood that Mr Ashworth is still collecting his mail from his post office address of PO Box 1621, Bilston, West Midlands, WV14 7YX but that in some cases, he is not responding to paper letters or that letters are being returned by him to the sender. We would advise clients who may have sent paper letters to Mr Ashworth but have received no response to resend, by recorded delivery, to both the PO Box and to Mr Ashworth’s street address which is 103, Oxford Street, Bilston, West Midlands, WV14 7EH. If no response is received we suggest informing Wolverhampton Trading Standards.

Suzy Chapman & Ciaran Farrell
February 2008

 

Contact details:

If you would like to discuss any of the issues raised in our statements or discuss your own experiences or have any information which may assist us please contact us, in confidence:

Email Suzy Chapman

or telephone:

Ciaran Farrell
Tel/FAX: 0207 485 3404
28 Headcorn, 25 Malden Road, Kentish Town, London, NW5 3HZ
Email Ciaran Farrell   

 

Links:

For further information and copies of our previous statements click here
Contact Suzy Chapman if you would like a PDF version of this document sent to you via email or Click here for a PDF copy.