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Groups welcome human rights ruling

Posted: 18 March 2004 | Subscribe Online


Disabled groups have hailed a legal ruling as a "huge step forward" in protecting the rights of disabled people receiving medical treatment.

Last week, the European Court of Human Rights decided that Portsmouth Hospital Trust should have applied to the High Court for permission to withdraw treatment from 17-year-old David Glass, who is blind and suffers from spastic quadriplegia, epilepsy and learning difficulties, when he was admitted with a severe respiratory infection in 1998.

Glass's condition deteriorated rapidly. Doctors said he was dying and, against his family's wishes, injected him with strong painkillers. But he defied their predictions by pulling through.
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The judges ruled that the failure to apply to the High Court interfered with the right to respect for David's private life and awarded the family £7,000 damages and £10,000 costs.

The Disability Rights Commission said the decision set a precedent. Future disputes between doctors and patients or their family over treatment would now have to be referred to the High Court, except in exceptional circumstances.
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Disability charity Scope hoped that doctors would, in the light of the case, take "a wider view in any life or death decisions for disabled people".

Portsmouth Hospitals Trust accepted that it should have taken the advice of the High Court in David's case but said doctors had acted on legal advice.


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