Anjana Ahuja
Star musicians and your favourite Times writers at the Albert Hall
David Southall looks surprisingly calm for a man who has lost his job, his income and his reputation. The paediatrician and child protection expert was struck off by the General Medical Council last week for inappropriately accusing a mother, Mandy Morris, referred to in the hearing as Mrs M, of drugging and hanging her ten-year-old son, Lee.
The ruling crowns a decade in which Southall, 59, has been targeted remorselessly by campaigners, mostly parents who believe that he has wronged them. In 2004 the GMC found him guilty of serious professional misconduct for accusing Sally Clark’s husband of murdering the couple’s two sons. Southall based his opinion on a TV interview with Mr Clark. He was suspended from child protection work.
In last week’s ruling, the GMC’s fitness-to-practise panel criticised Southall for “deep-seated attitudinal problems”, illustrated by his refusal to apologise to the parents involved in the two hearings. Southall calls it “a massive miscarriage of justice” and says that he will appeal.
Meanwhile, he remains unrepentant: “How can I say sorry for something I didn’t do? I did not accuse Mrs M, and my denial [of having made an accusation] was backed up by the experienced social worker who was there. I can understand how this last GMC panel – three lay people and an orthopaedic surgeon – could have empathy with Mrs M and find what they found. But that doesn’t make it the truth.”
As for the Clark case, Southall still believes that he behaved appropriately. “If I say sorry for something I didn’t do just because a panel has found that I did it, even though I didn’t, all that does is compound the injustice and wrong of the situation. It would be intellectually dishonest to do so.” He likens it to saying sorry for a murder that he didn’t commit.
Is it not high-handed to refuse to apologise? “I can see why people think that. But I’m not going to be dishonest about something just to make people believe I’m a nicer person.”
It’s a good job that Southall doesn’t care greatly about making enemies. This is his analysis of why he has become so reviled by campaigners and the media: he has been hounded by “obsessive, distressed, disordered and vengeful” parents and campaigners who have fed a complicit media emotion-filled stories of families torn apart by overzealous doctors and social workers; he is legally unable to respond because child abuse is dealt with by family courts and the officials involved, including him, must observe confidentiality; postShipman, the GMC wants to look tough and has become a slave to public opinion; the GMC panels that have judged his competence were insufficiently qualified to do so because they included no specialists in child protection work.
Not only have his judgments in child protection come under fire, but also his research on children with breathing difficulties. One newspaper suggested that he was implicated in the deaths of 28 babies. Southall says that he has been the target of “vexatious complainants”, who, by keeping him under investigation by both his hospital trust and the GMC, have ensured that he cannot speak out for fear of prejudicing his hearings. He was also advised to keep quiet by the Medical Defence Union, which has funded his legal representation.
Now, he feels, it is time to break the silence: “I have been unable to defend myself for ten years. I am regarded in the public domain as somebody who researches unethically on babies – I have even been compared to Josef Mengele – and who falsely accuses parents of abuse, splits up families, and so on. That's not how I’m seen by patients and colleagues but it is how I’m seen by the campaigners. Because they have the ear of the media and because the GMC follows the public perception of people, that’s how and why I was described like that by the panel. Sir Roy Meadow and myself were made into hate figures in this country by the campaign and media coverage.
“When you have predominantly lay panels [at the GMC] who cannot possibly be immune from public opinion, faced with me as a doctor, I don’t see how I could have obtained a fair hearing.”
His remarks would seem a monstrous exercise in self-justification were it not for the unflagging support that he has attracted inside the profession. During the hearing, the GMC received scores of letters from past and current colleagues attesting to Southall’s clinical judgment and dedication. Many wrote admiringly of his work with his charity Child Advocacy International, which earned Southall an OBE.
When he was struck off, doctors responded with dismay. Patricia Hamilton, President of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said that the college was saddened and disappointed" by the judgment.
“David Southall has made a major contribution to child health both nationally and internationally . . . we are very concerned that paediatricians and social workers will be deterred from undertaking child protection work, and that children and young people may come to harm.”
Thirty-nine members of the organisation Professionals Against Child Abuse, mostly paediatricians, expressed their concern in a letter to The Guardian: “. . . paediatricians appear to have no defence against complaints from aggrieved parents who may have abused their children”.
And those looking for an element of malice in the campaign against Southall and Meadow may well find it in an e-mail exchange between campaigning parents, revealed last week in The Times.The correspondents, jubilant at having claimed Southall’s scalp, discuss which paediatrician they should go after next.
I meet David Southall in Padding-ton station, West London, on a rainy Friday morning. Tall, silver-haired and with an authoritative air, he has travelled from his home in Wales to meet his brother, who is anxious to see him after recent events. Southall says that he has been inundated with messages of support since the GMC struck him off.
Not that he craves any external endorsement of his judgment. He is at ease with his conscience, convinced that he has never falsely accused parents of child abuse: “I have admitted that I got it wrong many times in terms of failing to recognise abuse, and believing that something was a medical problem instead of abuse. But have I ever got it wrong by falsely accusing parents? I don’t think so. Because I know how terrible that is for the parents, but mostly for the children.”
What about when a child is returned to the family? “Quite often, the parents have attacked me. They’ ll say, ‘It’s a false accusation because we got our child back’, leaving out all the information involved in the family court which they know I can’t talk about because of patient confidentiality.
“To say that the child has been returned because there was never abuse is too big a jump. [While the child is in care] lots of work is done with these families to ensure that they are safe to receive back their child. That doesn’t mean the original abuse didn’t happen; it means that there is no longer a risk. But if you’re a parent and you’ve had childcare proceedings, it’s very traumatic. People lash out with their grief over that.”
Then, he says, a small coterie of his enemies is standing by to exploit them. Southall names as his primary foes Penny Mellor, who has made more than 20 complaints against him and is associated with the website MAMA (Mothers Against Munchausen), and John Hemming, MP, who compared him to Mengele in the House. Mellor, he says, is motivated by “attention and revenge” for his involvement in her 2002 conviction for conspiracy to abduct a child.
They, not the parents, are responsible for his persecution, he claims. “I think most of them [the parents] are very distressed people. I don’t feel in any way angry at them. Personally, I consider them to be disordered in their behaviour towards their child
or children, but I don’t feel that these are horrible people.”
Does he feel like a martyr? After a long pause, he replies: “I’m not answering fully, head-on, with a yes, but I identify with the question because of the serious consequences that these GMC findings have had, and this campaign has had, on my life and family. It has also affected my international humanitarian work [with Child Advocacy International] in terms of my credibility and my ability to raise funds.”
Now that he has left the NHS – he took early retirement in 2004 – he cannot call himself professor any more. He could have kept the title if Keele University, where he was formerly professor of paediatrics, had granted him a standard-issue emeritus professorship, but it did not. The decision rankles: Southall sought, using the Freedom of Information Act, the basis on which Keele had made its decision, which he calls “thoroughly corrupt”.
But it’s just a title, I say. Doesn’t your pursuit of this comparatively trivial matter, while the GMC rains allegation after allegation on your head, point to an obsessive, perhaps paranoid, character who attributes poor judgment to all but himself?
Southall agrees that it appears trivial, but points to the importance of the title for fundraising. “Obsessive? No. Determined? Yes. I think the obsession is on the other side, in campaigners and parents. Remember, I’ve been involved with about 120 families and I’m not obsessing over any one of them.”
If not an obsessive, then a crusad-er? “Yes, that could be said about me,” he agrees. “The more exposed you are to the terrible things that people do to their children – and I was exposed to the worst of it for a long time in the covert surveillance work [using hidden cameras, he found that some babies in hospitals were being suffocated by their mothers] – you can become, first, depressed and, secondly, determined to protect the next child. I see illness in children all day, including cancer, but there is nothing, nothing, that compares to being a child who is targeted in your home by the one person who is supposed to look after you, and you have no way out.”
I put it to him that, if his clinical judgments are indeed correct, there must be some reason why he attracts such opprobrium. Is there something about him – a personality flaw, perhaps – that has helped to bring his world crashing down?
Southall, who says that the campaign against him contributed to the breakdown of his second marriage (he has since remarried, and says that all his wives and four children stand by him), denies having a personality disorder but admits: “I do tend to be fairly direct and to say what I think no matter what the circumstances. But I’d hate to be thought unkind.”
His charity work sent him to Bos-nia and Afghanistan, where, he says, he saw horrific abuse in refugee camps and orphanages. Does he think that he suffered from posttraumatic stress disorder?
“It would be crazy to assume that I didn’t have PTSD,” he says. “I couldn’t sleep, I was having flash-backs.” However, he rejects my suggestion that PTSD might be associated with impaired judgment: “Is it? Maybe it’s enhanced judgment. What I’m not prepared to accept is that my judgment has been impaired in a way that could justify criticisms from the GMC panel or campaigners.”
Southall finds the GMC ruling “completely unacceptable on every level – for abused children, and for doctors trying their best to protect them. They are watching with horror at what has happened to Roy Meadow and myself. They are thinking, ‘How can I carry on doing child protection work if there’s a possibility of a complaint to the GMC, of me ending up in front of a panel that doesn’t understand child protection and is willing to believe a parent rather than me plus an experienced independent social worker, and the possibility of losing my job?’
“That’s where the danger lies. There has been enormous publicity over those cases where convictions have been overturned. Against that is the almost monthly occurrence of a child being tortured to death.
“People have not wanted to accuse someone of abuse because, once you cross that line, you are regarded as a zealot and someone who has a problem. But if you are to protect children, someone has to cross that line.”
Follow our three athletes' progress in their preparations for the London Triathlon, and pick up training tips and more
Enjoy screenings of all the classic films you love, plus take advantage of two-for-one tickets
We explore leisure activities that are safe and suitable for all of the family
Times Online's new TV show helps you make the right decisions for your pet
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles


Luxury French truffles, £11.99. Treat yourself today

A treasure trove of baubles, booty and stylish quests

£129,500
Bentley Edinburgh
£79,850
Mercedes-Benz of Northampton
£26,995
Unit 1, Woodfield Business Unit, Kidderminster Road, Ombersley, Worcester.
Great car insurance deals online
90k + Bonus + Options
Confidential
London
£23,716 +
Highways Agency
National
£
£43,405 - £48,228 pa
Notting Hill Housing
London
£30,000 base, £100,000 OTE
Riches Consulting
London/South
with annexe accommodation and 5.25 acres
£1,100,000
Beautiful Gardens w/ stunning Thames Views
Studios £33K, 1 Beds £60K, 2 beds £79K
Mortgages, bank acc & money transfers to help you buy abroad
Explore mystical Jordan
From £1030 for 7nts 4*
to USA's Most Cosmopolitan City; San Francisco!
£POA
Book Now for Winter 08/09 and Get 10% off!
Great travel insurance deals online
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times. Search globrix.com to buy or rent UK property. Visit our classified services and find jobs, used cars, property or holidays. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.
Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.
Hardly surprising that Professor Southall's peers attest to his being of good character.
I seem to remember Hyman QC having Sir Mark Potter, President of the Family Court Division of the High Court step forward to attest that Mr Hyman was of good character. Hyman was then found guilty of seeking to pervert the course of justice and falsifying evidence which could have seen an innocent father sent to jail. An error of judgment on Mr Potter's part (not a good thing for his own resume!).
So long as family courts remain secret, and the benchmark for judgments is a balance of probability (or opinion, soothsaying or clairvoyance on occasion), there are no proper checks and balances in place to stop miscarriages of justice.
Maybe the General Medical Council actually looks at evidence rather than simple opinion. Let's hope the family courts follow that principle in the not too distant future.
Michael Robinson, Brampton, Cumbria
Can those against Professor Southall and the diagnosis Munchausen's by proxy please let us know what to call the monsters he discovered breaking their children's arms, suffocating them etc whilst being secretly filmed on the ward?
jim, reading, uk
For a supposedly rare condition, MSBP is pretty common, and easy enough to diagnose. Even untrained Cafcass officers have been able to "diagnose" this syndrome, as so many of the forced adoption secret Family Courts mothers will testify.
MSBP and it's stable partner, Parental Alienation Syndrome and regurarly used as tools with which to influence the Family Courts to take children away from their mothers. PAS was iunvented by Richard Gardner, an American psychologist who avocated sexual contact between adults and children in the 35 books he published.
No wonder the Family Courts are kept secret, with all those skeletons lurking in the closet!
Barbara, Staffordshire, England
It is now agreed that Beverley Allitt didn't have this mythical MSBP after all. She was 'just' a murderer.
It is a junk diagnosis, and even if it was a real mental illness suffered only by adults then what the hell was a paediatrician doing diagnosing it?
Emily, London,
, I despair at the state of affairs that exist surrounding the demise of Dr Southall,Professor Meadows and their colleagues all of whom will have to carry on working to protect children knowing that the witch hunt continues, as evidenced by recent triumphant e-mails.
As many retired police officers like myself could testify, the evidence gleaned by covert surveillance of suspect parents and their treatment of their children, would have frightened the life out of most decent people and caused deep concern for the safety of the children involved, but I suspect not those with perhaps a hidden agenda who may choose to denigrate.
It is no doubt thanks to them that such surveillance is now considered a breach of their human rights and thus banned.
Who will consider the human rights of the child tortured to death each month ?
Dr.Southall is struck off but this may, I hope, just be the dawning of the awful truth of what really happens to our abused children.
D.Jarvis, Swansea,
Beverley Allitt's behaviour was no different to Harold Shipman or a more recent case of a male nurse. No one has even suggested that they were suffering from Munchausens by Proxy in fact the generally held view is that they were psychopaths. It needs to be remembered that it was Professor Meadow himself who said that Beverley Allitt had Munchausen's by Proxy.
Heather Collins, Norwich, UK
I see: Everybody's wrong but Mr Southall. After ruining countless lives with his half-baked TV diagnosis, he should be seving time, not living in comfortable retirement.
Colin Nicolson, London, UK
You ask of David Southall: 'there must be some reason why [you] attract such opprobrium?' Allow me to suggest an answer - Southall systematically puts the needs of children before those of parents - and that is something with which we, as a culture, cannot come to terms. My partner worked alongside Southall for a number of years. Suffice it to say, that both my partner & I were sure that if ever any of our children were to show any untoward symptoms, we would seek to turn to Southall first, safe in the knowledge that our childrens' well-being would be best served by his care. Just as there is no question that Southall is arrogant, so also there is no question that he has been the victim of a coordinated witch hunt. There is also no question as to the outstanding quality of both his clinical and academic work.
M. Faltig, Stoke-on-Trent, UK
" I can't admit to something I haven't done, I'd rather spend thirty years in Prison" words quoted from my husband serving life sentences for being convicted of killing his baby . David Southall can't say sorry for something he says he hasn't done, well blatantly he has.....he's lost his reputation and his income not much consolation for the parents who have been accused of false allegations of child abuse. I have never said child abuse does not exist, as a parent I have felt physically sick at some of the accounts of child abuse. I could hope that Southall and his colleagues may understand a bit now what's it's like. I think I may see pink elephants fly first.
J Rodda, pembrokeshire, Wales
The theory of MSBP as employed in the last decade-and-a-half determines that all women (the theory just never worked on a male) are mad, or will be mad. Women of any age with children or not, carers, grandmothers...women who might have babies. It doesn't matter who, they are as mad as Allitt, or might be.
Indeed they are so mad they cannot be treated, because MSBP has no cure...no woman whose new-born baby or child has been removed has ever been offered treatment or councelling by social services.
To deny an allegation of MSBP is confirmation of you having it.
Paediatricians, Social workers and health professionals routinely employ allegations of MSBP. See what happens to the mother of a new-born baby if she is foolish enough to complain about the filthy state of a maternity ward.
The allegation is so easy to make.Meadow managed to update 16th century witch-hunting for our Modern Age...we might think that women have more rights in society than in the past, but just a whisper...
Richard England, Bradford, England
Was Mother Theresa also suffering from Munchausen's Syndrome by proxy? Where are Prof. Sir Roy Meadow and Dr. David Southall when you really need them? No case is too far-fetched or outrageous for these guys.
Andrew Milner, Karuizawa, Japan
Amidst all this denigration of Roy Meadow and David Southall the implication appears to be that 'Munchausen's by proxy' is a fallacy; a fantasy diagnosis created to enahnce the reputations of the doctors involved. Has everyone forgotten Beverley Allitt? I doubt the parents of Grantham have such short memories.
Jenny Ogilvy, Mosgiel, NZ