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No right to write off

Posted: 13 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


A hospital's recommendation that life-saving treatment should be denied to a patient because he has learning difficulties is symptomatic of the way that disabled people are still too often viewed in our society.

Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss rightly concluded in her landmark decision in the High Court that people with learning difficulties should receive the same treatment as anybody else. That this assault on the basic right to life should have occurred in the first place shows how readily disabled people can be written off even now that there is an active user movement.
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More fundamentally, perhaps, the hospital's recommendation illustrates the extent to which the voice of disabled people is barely audible to people in power. In this week's issue we also consider the other side of the coin, whether there is a right to die, and the notable struggle of some disabled people to exercise control over the manner of their death.
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Of course, the right to live and the putative right to die make strange bedfellows. But if we believe in rights-based welfare, disabled people's arguments concerning both must surely be heard. For that to happen, they must be able to escape from the shadow of the professionals who rule over their lives.


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