Press Release

‘MSP’ patient who wanted to live dies after ‘tragic’ ruling

10 June 2020         Issued by: Christian Concern

Today (June 10) lawyers representing Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust have announced that the 34-year-old patient, known as ‘MSP’, has died in intensive care after having his life support removed.

The announcement follows a judgment last week which ruled that it was in his best interests to have his life support switched off, despite his last wishes stating that he wanted to receive the treatment needed to live.

MSP had previously said he did not want to live with a permanent stoma, a surgical hole in the stomach to which a colostomy bag is attached to collect digestive waste.

Crucially, however, on May 27 when faced with the prospect of losing his life, the patient changed his mind and said he did want the treatment to live ahead of an operation which left him in intensive care.

Despite this, Mr Justice Hayden, in a judgment handed down on 1 June overruled the patient’s wishes relying on statements which are legally invalid.

The case is a tragedy

Andrea Williams, chief executive of Christian Concern, said: “This case is nothing short of a tragedy. It was clear from the evidence of the case that this was a young man who was struggling to come to grips with his illness, but who was also vulnerable and had a history of self-harming and bi-polar disorder. Despite that, when he was faced with the biggest existential crisis of his life, whether he should live or he should die, he chose life. Mr Justice Hayden admits that M.S.P was fully competent to give his consent to the procedure but chose to override that consent. 

“For a court of law to decide that a 34-year-old man who asked for a procedure to be done and who would have had some level of meaningful recovery would nonetheless be sedated and then deprived of hydration and food until he died is an absolute horror. Let’s be clear, on the basis of the judgment, Mr Justice Hayden decided to override the express wishes of a patient with the ability to recover and ordered him to die.

“The Christian Legal Centre made every effort to have the case reviewed, petitioning the appropriate authorities, including the Official Solicitor, to act with urgency to do so. MSP’s death is a devastating moment which should chill us all to the bone.”

Urgent inquiry called for

Mr Justice Hayden is best known for his controversial 2018 decision to withdraw life support from 1-year-old Alfie Evans, despite the opposition of his parents who wanted to fly him to an Italian hospital willing to provide treatment.

In an urgent letter to Justice Secretary Robert Buckland, the Christian Legal Centre (CLC) is urging the government to set up an urgent public inquiry to review the cases where doctors were ordered to switch off life support by the Court of Protection or the Family Division of the High Court.

The CLC had also written to the Official Solicitor, Sarah Castle – the Ministry of Justice official who was joined to the court proceedings to represent MSP’s interests – urging her to appeal the decision to the Court of Appeal.

Document was legally invalid

MSP had developed a gastric ulcer and other gastroenterological problems in 2019 and had a temporary stoma bag fitted.

He told his parents and doctors that he “utterly loathed” it and that he would rather die.

As his condition developed, MSP wrote a document known as an ‘Advance Directive’ in February 2020, where he refused his consent to “the formation of a stoma… that is expected to be permanent or with likelihood of reversal of 50% of under” or any “requirement for ongoing medical treatment that will prevent me from living independently”.

He prepared the formal document but as Mr Justice Hayden acknowledged in last week’s court hearing, the document was not properly executed or witnessed, and is therefore legally invalid.

At MSP’s insistence, doctors removed his temporary stoma on 14 May.

He changed his mind

A few days later MSP had to be rushed back to hospital with severe abdominal pain and sepsis. ‘Dr M.’, the consultant gastroenterological surgeon on duty, told him that the only way to save his life was to fit a stoma bag immediately.

Faced with this choice, MSP chose to have the bag inserted during an operation indicating that he had changed his mind and wanted to live. Justice Hayden himself recognised this in court last week when he said: “There is no doubt that MSP expressed his consent to the stoma being inserted”.

On May 27, the stoma bag was urgently fitted during an operation leaving MSP in intensive care and heavily sedated, but with a good chance of survival.

Dr M.’s colleagues, who had treated MSP before, were surprised to learn of his change of heart. The hospital then made an urgent out-of-hours application to Mr Justice Hayden to determine whether that life-saving treatment was or was not in MSP’s best interests.

The application was supported by MSP’s parents, and an urgent hearing followed by Skype on June 1 which resulted in Mr Justice Hayden making the order to withdraw life support.

Following this order, on June 10, lawyers representing Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust announced that MSP had died.

  • Share
Privacy settings

Our website uses cookies, usage analysis and other technologies. We use these tools because they help us to run our website, provide you with content (including video and audio clips), understand how people use our website, make improvements to our services, and promote our work more effectively. This means that we and selected third-party services may store cookies and other similar information on your device, and may analyse how you use our website. Some of these tools are necessary for our website to function as intended but others are optional, and you can choose whether or not to allow them. You can find out more here.

Core functionality

Certain cookies and other technologies are used on our website to provide core functionality. You can read more about this here. You may be able to use your browser settings to block these tools but if you do, our website may not function as intended.

Embedded content

To enrich your experience of this website, we embed carefully selected content from other platforms. For example, we embed video clips from our YouTube channel, and audio clips from our SoundCloud channel. These third-party platforms may store and use cookies (or similar technology) on your device, and may analyse your use of this site or the embedded content. We do not directly control what technologies they use. You can find out more here. If embedded content is disabled it may affect your experience of this website.

Analytics and promotion

This website uses tools from selected third-party providers (Google and Facebook) to help us understand how people arrive at and use our website, and to measure and improve the effectiveness of some of our promotional activity. These tools may store and use cookies (and similar information) on your device, and analyse your use of this website, and other sites and platforms. These tools help us to improve our services, reach people who may be interested in our work and make better use of our resources but information may be shared with these third-party providers and may be used for their own purposes. You can find out more here.