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Court rules that mental incapacity is not a bar to equal medical treatment

Posted: 13 March 2003 | Subscribe Online



Learning difficulties charities have heralded as a landmark decision last week's ruling by the High Court that people with learning difficulties should receive the same medical treatment as everyone else.

Judge Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss ruled that a hospital had been wrong to deny life-saving medical treatment and only provide palliative care to S, who has a kidney failure, on the basis that he has autism.

The family of S were unhappy with the hospital's recommendation in December 2002 that he receive no new forms of dialysis or a kidney transplant because of his severe learning difficulty. Their local social services department - which cannot be named - supported their legal challenge.
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Butler-Sloss, president of the High Court's family division, said that not providing satisfactory medical treatment was contrary to the rights of a mentally incapacitated patient under UK and European law.

She added: "In my judgement, a kidney transplantation ought not to be rejected on the grounds of his inability to understand the purpose and consequence of the operation or concerns about the management of his behaviour.

"It is crucial that S, suffering as he does, from serious physical and mental problems, is not given less satisfactory treatment than a person who has full capacity to understand the risks, the pain and discomfort inseparable from such major surgery."

David Congdon, head of campaigns and policy at Mencap, said to deny treatment to someone because they had a disability was "an assault on their basic human rights".
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Jean Collins, director of campaigning charity Values into Action, added: "Hospitals have always taken it upon themselves to decide which patients should have their resources. This will make hospitals think again before they write-off someone with learning difficulties."

Association of Directors of Social Services spokesperson on learning difficulties John Dixon said that a lack of understanding of the needs of people with learning difficulties led to problems ensuring they received proper levels of health care. "It takes that little bit extra attention from NHS staff to recognise the needs of people with learning difficulties and if they don't do that they are not maximising their potential," he said.




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