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Human rights battle on seclusion policy

Posted: 15 May 2003 | Subscribe Online


The health secretary will intervene in an appeal court case this week over the Mental Health Act's code of practice regarding decisions on the use of solitary confinement.

Alan Milburn is expected to back the rulings of two High Court cases challenging the hospitals' seclusion policies last year, in which judges said the code was not binding on health and social care staff and that organisations only had to have "due regard" to the code.

But mental health charity Mind, which has also given evidence to the appeal case, wants the code to provide a legally enforceable safeguard of individual patients' rights.
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The charity is arguing that the use of seclusion - in some cases for months at a time - contravenes article 8 of the Human Rights Act 1998, which protects a person's right to private and family life.

Principal solicitor Simon Foster said: "Prison conditions are regulated by legal rules, so why should mental health patients, most of whom have committed no crime, have less protection than prisoners?"


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