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Human Rights and health care practical application

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Artificial nutrition or hydration (article 8) Religious beliefs in workplace (article 9) ... R v Cambridgeshire Health Authority, ex p B (1995) Articles 2 & 3 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Rights and health care practical application


1
Human Rights and health care practical
application
  • Chris Cox
  • Director of Legal Services
  • Royal College of Nursing

2
Human Rights - overview
  • Research has shown that the application of
    human rights principles, for example dignity and
    respect can help to improve a patients
    experience and quality of care and will
    inevitably lead to improved outcomes Audit
    Commission
  • Accountability
  • Empowerment
  • Participation

3
Human Rights - overview
  • The Convention as a living instrument
  • Strasbourg jurisprudence
  • Absolute and qualified rights
  • Public authorities and those undertaking public
    activities
  • Positive and negative obligations
  • Sections 3, 6, 7 and 8
  • Proportionality

4
Protected rights
  • Article 2 - right to life
  • Article 3 - freedom from torture or inhuman or
    degrading treatment
  • Article 5 - right to liberty and security of
    person
  • Article 6 - right to a fair trial
  • Article 8 - right to respect for private and
    family life
  • Article 9 - freedom of thought, conscience and
    religion

5
Protected rights
  • Article 10 - freedom of expression
  • Article 11 - right of association
  • Article 12 - right to found a family
  • Article 14 - freedom from discrimination
  • Article 1 of First Protocol - protection of
    property

6
Unlawful discrimination
  • Article 14
  • Not free-standing
  • Other status
  • Defining disability
  • Meaning of discrimination - identifying
    comparator
  • Objective and reasonable justification
  • Indirect discrimination

7
Illustrations
  • Life saving treatment (article 2)
  • Safeguarding the vulnerable (article 3)
  • Detention because of mental ill-health (article
    5)
  • Professional registration (article 6)
  • Covert filming (article 8)
  • Artificial nutrition or hydration (article 8)
  • Religious beliefs in workplace (article 9)
  • IVF treatment (article 12)
  • Access to treatment (article 14)

8
HRA management tool
  • DH human rights based approach (HRBA) putting
    human rights principles and standards at the
    heart of policy and planning (2007)
  • Individual at heart of system
  • Best standard of service that resources will
    permit
  • Perspectives of others balancing rights and
    interests
  • Individual and community
  • Better decisions, objectivity, defence

9
HRA checklist
  • Step one what is decision, policy or process
    being developed? Why? Purpose?
  • Step two identification of rights (see articles)
    what, who, how?
  • Step three protection of rights or positive
    obligations what, action?
  • Step four balancing rights (clear legal basis
    legitimate aim necessary proportionate least
    restrictive non-discriminatory)
  • Step five organisation process consultation
    agreement information training

10
Illustration restricting access to a drug
treatment
  • Decision? Duty on PCT to commission medical
    services as it considers necessary to meet the
    healthcare needs of the local population as a
    whole, within allocated resources.
  • What rights? Whose? Ban treatment outright or
    restrict to exceptional circumstances? What
    circumstances?
  • Positive duty?
  • Balancing rights?
  • Organisational action?

11
Clinical negligence
  • In context of healthcare quality, few legally
    enforceable patient rights
  • Common law duty of care Bolam (1957) and Bolitho
    (1997) professional standard/limits of medical
    discretion
  • Standards of adequate and appropriate care (X v
    UK (1978))
  • Chester v Afshar (2004) vindication of
    patients rights the overriding consideration
    leading to relaxation in traditional requirements

12
Accessing treatment
  • Rationing
  • NHS Act 2006, NHS Act 1977 and Regulations
  • Rogers v Swindon NHS PCT (2006) rigorous
    scrutiny by courts where life and death
    situations (general policy of refusal save where
    exceptional circumstances permitted, so long as
    able to envisage what would be exceptional)
  • R v Cambridgeshire Health Authority, ex p B
    (1995)
  • Articles 2 3
  • Does general policy have rational basis? Has it
    been applied appropriately in the particular
    case?

13
Degrading treatment and article 3
  • High threshold - minimum level of severity
  • Duration, physical and mental effects, sex, age,
    victims health
  • Positive action to prevent abuses
  • Compulsory medical treatment and therapeutic
    necessity

14
Competency and consent
  • Gillick (1985)
  • Articles 5, 8 and 14
  • Re F (Mental Patient)(Sterilisation) 1990
  • Doctrine of necessity and best interests
  • R v Bournewood Community Health Trust ex p L
    (1998)
  • Articles 3 and 8
  • Mental Capacity Act

15
Health records and confidentiality
  • Article 8
  • Z v Finland (1998)
  • Data Protection Act 1998

16
Right to marry and found a family
  • Article 12
  • Disabled people and parenting
  • Fertility treatment and Article 14
  • Sterilisation

17
Private life and Article 8
  • Right to establish and develop relationships
    with other human beings
  • Physical and moral integrity, e.g. consent to
    medical treatment
  • Private life, including physical privacy
  • Accessing information relating to private life
  • Right to a home and independent living
  • Family life

18
Restraint
  • Form
  • Abuse
  • No specific legislation
  • General criminal and civil law
  • Statutes Mental Health Act 1983 (as amended by
    Mental Health Act 2007), Human Rights Act 1998

19
Restraint of children and young people
  • RCN Restraining, holding still and containing
    children and young people guide for good
    practice (2003)
  • BMA Consent, Rights and Choices in Health Care
    for Children and Young People (2001)
  • United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
    Child 1989
  • Parental rights and responsibilities

20
HRA 98 (1)
  • Article 5
  • Meaning of detention Ashingdane v UK (1985)
  • Principles Winterwerp v The Netherlands
    (1979/80)
  • objective medical expertise reliably showing
    person to be of unsound mind
  • disorder of a kind and degree warranting
    compulsory confinement

21
HRA 98 (2)
  • Continuing disorder
  • In accordance with domestic law
  • Procedural safeguards (Article 5(4))
  • Article 3 (Herczegfalvy v Austria (1993)
  • Duration of treatment
  • Physical or mental effects
  • Age, sex, vulnerability and state of health
  • Article 8
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