A woman left with a fear of owls following months of religious grooming by a doctor has been awarded more than £12,000 after a High Court ruling.
Sally Brayshaw, 56, of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, was taken to religious meetings and told the devil was "having a real go" at her by GP Thomas O'Brien.
At one of a series of religious meetings she attended with the locum doctor, a preacher spoke of sacrificing an owl which left her "terrified" of the birds and she later became upset when seeing a picture of one.
The former special constable, of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, wanted to discuss her depression, but claims locum GP Dr Thomas O'Brien tried to 'heal her without medication'.
Over the next six months Dr O'Brien engaged Mrs Brayshaw in a number of religious activities.
She claimed the locum doctor, a Pentecostal Christian, suggested she was possessed by demons and advised her not to see a psychiatrist.
Mrs Brayshaw, who has multiple physical and mental health problems, was in pain following an operation when she went to see Dr O'Brien in August 2012.
He suggested a way of healing without medication which she agreed to try because she was "feeling desperate", her lawyers said at an earlier hearing.
Today, a judge ruled that Dr O'Brien was 'negligent' and said Mrs Brayshaw is entitled to more than £12,700 compensation from him.
Mr Justice Martin Spencer said it was 'foreseeable' Mrs Brayshaw might 'react adversely' in the way she did.
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