Cerebral Palsy compensation - £4 million payout for six-year-old girl starved of oxygen at birth
Holly Nixon was left brain damaged after being starved of oxygen during her birth at Worcestershire Royal Hospital in 2003.
She has quadriplegic cerebral palsy, cannot get around by herself and has been left with only limited speech and impaired vision.
Her parents, Emma and Carl, launched a bid for compensation from the hospital’s managers Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, arguing that it was responsible for Holly’s injuries during her birth.
The trust accepted liability to pay and, after out-of-court negotiations, agreed a £2 million lump sum compensation payout, with additional annual compensation payments to fund her care for as long as she lives. The package, approved by Judge Robin Spencer QC, is expected to be worth more than £4m if Holly lives as long as experts believe she will.
Speaking after the hearing Mr Nixon, whose wife had a baby, Lilly, 11 days ago, said: “Holly is a wonderful little girl and she is loved very much by all who know her. However, by now she should be running around with her friends and starting music or dancing classes. We have been robbed of this and so many other countless opportunities that she should have had during her life.”
At the High Court, Paul Rees QC, for the NHS Trust, said it was important that the health service offered an “unreserved apology” to Holly and her parents in open court.
Top ranked cerebral palsy lawyer Susan Brown from Reading based law firm Boyes Turner said: "Obviously no amount of money will compensate a child for a brain injury which leaves them dependant on others for assistance with all activites of daily living for the rest of their life. However awards of compensation in these sorts of cases
do at least provide some financial security and a means of funding the very considerable specialist care needs that these children have, making it possible for them to achieve a better quality of life."
Consistent with our policy when giving comment and advice on a non-specific basis, we cannot assume legal responsibility for the accuracy of any particular statement. In the case of specific problems we recommend that professional advice be sought.
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