R (B) v Cambridge Health Authority
R (B) v Cambridge Health Authority [1995] EWCA Civ 43 is a UK judicial review and enterprise law case, concerning health care in the UK. FactsThe parents of a child named Jaymee Bowen claimed that she should receive chemotherapy and a second bone marrow transplant for their 10 year old’s acute myeloid leukaemia. Consultants at Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, and Royal Marsden Hospital in London thought it would not succeed. Treatment in the United States would have been far too expensive. One doctor in Hammersmith would have treated her for £75,000. The doctors believed it would be ineffective and inappropriate. JudgmentHigh CourtLaws J held the doctors should have to "do more than toll the bell of tight resources. They must explain the priorities that have led them to decline to fund the treatment." Court of AppealSir Thomas Bingham MR held, the same day, the Health Authority had acted rationally and fairly and intervention would be misguided.
SignificanceAfter the Court of Appeal judgment, The Sun said the child was "Condemned by Bank Balance" and the Daily Mail said the child was "Sentenced to Death". An anonymous private donor paid for treatment. The consultant who had agreed changed tack, did not provide a second bone marrow transplant, and did an experimental treatment called donor lymphocyte infusion. Jaymee died after a few months. The funeral of Jaymee Bowen was held on 28 May 1996. That evening Channel 4 cancelled its scheduled late-night programmes to enable the TV discussion After Dark to debate the issues of the case, with among others Julian Tudor Hart, Martin Israel and the NHS Director of Public Health who had turned down Jaymee's family when they asked for further treatment.[1][full citation needed] See alsoNotes
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