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143 judgments found.
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 23800/06; [2008] ECHR 108; (2008) 46 EHRR SE16
Health Topics:
Controlled substances,
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Informed consent,
Prisons Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to life,
Right to privacy Facts: The applicant was a United Kingdom national imprisoned at H.M. Prison Whitemoor who complained that the Government’s failure to provide needle exchange programs in prisons violated the rights of prisoners under Article 2 (respect for the right to life), Article 3 (prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment), Article 8 (respect for …Read more
Tags: Custody,
Drug use,
Harm reduction,
Health care technology,
Health regulation,
Hepatitis,
HIV,
IDUs,
Imprisonment,
Incarceration,
Informed choice,
Inhuman treatment,
Injecting drug users,
Inmate,
Jail,
Most-at-risk,
People who use drugs,
Prison conditions,
Transmission
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 26565/05; [2008] ECHR 453
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Health care and health services,
HIV/AIDS,
Medicines Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to health,
Right to privacy Facts: The applicant, a Ugandan national, was HIV positive and claimed that if the United Kingdom forced her to return to Uganda then she would not have sufficient access to medical treatment for her condition. She claimed that this result would violate her rights under Articles 3 (prohibiting torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment) …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
Antiretrovirals,
ARVs,
Asylum,
Cruel treatment,
Degrading treatment,
Essential medicines,
HIV,
HIV positive,
Immigration,
Inhuman treatment,
Migrants,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
Pharmaceuticals,
PLHIV,
Refugees
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2008] UKHL 52
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Medicines Human Rights: Right to housing,
Right to social security Facts: M was Zimbabwean citizen diagnosed as HIV positive, who was living in the United Kingdom while his appeal of a decision to return him to Zimbabwe was ongoing. Because of his illness, he applied to the local health authority to assess his needs for accommodation. The authority declined to provide accommodation to M. It determined …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
Antiretrovirals,
ARVs,
First-line treatment,
HIV,
HIV positive,
HIV status,
Immigration,
Migrants,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
PLHIV,
Second-line treatment,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
Social security,
STDs,
STIs,
Subsidies
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2008] UKHL 74
Health Topics:
Hospitals,
Medical malpractice,
Mental health Human Rights: Right to life Facts: In July 2004 CS was being treated as a detained patient at Runwell Hospital under the Mental Health Act. She absconded and went on to commit suicide by throwing herself in front of a train. A public inquest was held and concluded that the precautions in place at the hospital were inadequate. S, the daughter …Read more
Tags: Compulsory commitment,
Duty of care,
Involuntary commitment,
Mandatory commitment,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Negligence,
Schizophrenia,
Suicide,
Tort
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: Court of Appeal, Civil Division
Citation: [2008] EWCA Civ 39
Health Topics:
Violence Human Rights: Right to life Facts: S, who was attacked and seriously injured by his former partner J, brought a claim of negligence against the Sussex police on the grounds that he had repeatedly told them that J had threatened to kill him but they had failed to act on this evidence. The judge at first instance, while denying that the …Read more
Tags: Domestic violence,
Law enforcement,
Police,
Sexual violence
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2008
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2008] UKHL 72; [2009] UKHRR 450; 25 BHRC 663; [2009] 2 WLR 48; [2009] HRLR 11; [2009] 1 AC 335; [2009] 2 All ER 436
Health Topics:
Prisons Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment Facts: W faced two charges of murder in Missouri, United States of America (USA). He was arrested in the United Kingdom (UK) and the USA requested his extradition. In Missouri, the mandatory sentence was death or life without parole, except by the discretion of the Governor. The prosecutor vowed not to seek the death penalty. W …Read more
Tags: Cruel and unusual punishment,
Cruel treatment,
Custody,
Degrading treatment,
Execution,
Imprisonment,
Incarceration,
Inhuman treatment,
Torture
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2007] UKHL 27
Health Topics:
Aging,
Health care and health services,
Hospitals,
Mental health,
Poverty Human Rights: Right to social security Facts: YL was an 84-year old woman suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, who was entitled to free accommodation provided by the Birmingham City Council under s 21 of the National Assistance Act 1948 (the 1948 Act). The council, with the power given to it by s 26 of the same Act, contracted a private health service provider …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Aged persons,
Elderly,
Indigent,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Older persons,
Poor,
Private hospitals,
Public hospitals,
Senior citizens
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2007] UKHL 39
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Mental health,
Occupational health Human Rights: Right to favorable working conditions Facts: A group of employees brought an action in negligence for damages against their employer, Chemical & Insulating Co, for exposure to asbestos in the course of their employment. The employees had been negligently exposed to asbestos and had as a consequence developed pleural plaques. This was the thickening of a layer of fibers on the …Read more
Tags: Asbestos,
Job safety,
Lung disease,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Occupational accident,
Occupational disease,
Occupational hazards,
Occupational health and safety,
Respiratory diseases,
Safe working conditions,
Workers' compensation
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: Court of Appeal, Civil Division
Citation: [2007] EWCA Civ 514
Health Topics:
Controlled substances,
Health care and health services,
Medicines,
Mental health Human Rights: Right to family life Facts: KR was an Iraqi Kurd. He was a lieutenant in the state police under Saddam Hussein’s regime but acted as an informer for the separatist PUK movement. In 1987 his clandestine activity was suspected. He was detained and tortured but the following year was released and resumed work as a police officer. In 1991 he …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Asylum,
Depression,
Immigration,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Migrants,
Psychotropic drugs,
Refugees,
Suicide
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: European Court of Justice
Citation: Case C-127/05, Comm'n v. U.K., 2007 E.C.R. I-4619.
Health Topics:
Health systems and financing,
Occupational health Human Rights: Right to health Facts: The Commission of the European Communities (Commission) brought an action against the United Kingdom for a declaration that provisions of section 2(1) of the UK Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (Act), read in conjunction with sections 33 and 47 of that Act, permitted the United Kingdom to negate its obligations under Article …Read more
Tags: Health regulation,
Job safety,
Occupational accident,
Occupational disease,
Occupational hazards,
Occupational health and safety,
Safe working conditions
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Evans v. United Kingdom [GC], App. No. 6339/05, 46 Eur. H.R. Rep. 34 (2008).
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Medicines,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to family life,
Right to life Facts: Applicant had her eggs extracted for the purposes of in vitro fertilization in 2001. Her ovaries were thereafter removed due to the presence of tumors. Six embryos were created using her eggs and the sperm of her partner ‘J.’. Schedule 3 of the Human Fertilization and Embryology Act of 1990 allowed for the withdrawal of …Read more
Tags: Childbirth,
Family planning,
Fertility,
In utero fertilization,
In vitro fertilization,
Infertility,
Parental consent,
Parental notification,
Pregnancy,
Spousal consent,
Spousal notification
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Health Topics:
Health information,
Mental health Human Rights: Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to privacy,
Right to social security Facts: The applicant, a mental health patient, brought action against the Secretary of State for Health alleging violations of Articles 8 (private life), 13 (ineffective remedy) and 46.1 (failure to change law) of the European Convention on human Rights when she was without power to change or even make objections to the identity of her ’nearest …Read more
Tags: Confidentiality,
Disclosure,
Health data,
Health records,
Medical records,
Molestation,
Remedies,
Secrecy,
Sexual abuse
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2007
Court: The European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application no. 44362/04
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Prisons,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Right to family life Facts: The applicants met and married while both were incarcerated via a pen-pal program. The applicants wished to conceive a child. However, given Ms. Dickson’s age at the time of Mr. Dickson’s earliest release date, it was unlikely they would be able to have a child without the use of artificial insemination facilities. As such, the …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Assisted reproductive technology,
Detention,
Imprisonment,
In utero fertilization,
Incarceration,
Inmate,
Jail,
Pregnancy
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: European Court of Justice
Citation: C-372/04
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing Human Rights: Right to health,
Right to social security Facts: This case was a reference for a preliminary ruling, concerning the interpretation of Articles 48-50 of the Treaty establishing the European Community, as well as Article 22 of Council Regulation 1408/71 on the application of social security schemes to employed persons, self-employed persons and members of their families moving within the Community. The reference arose …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Budget,
Emergency care,
Employment,
Health expenditures,
Health funding,
Health insurance,
Health regulation,
Health spending,
Out-of-pocket expenditures,
Reimbursement,
Social security,
Tertiary care
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2006] UKHL 20, [2006] 2 WLR 1027,[2006] 2 AC 572; [2006] All ER (D) 23 (May); [2006] NLJR 796
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Occupational health Human Rights: Right to favorable working conditions Facts: This case was brought as a test case to examine the scope of an exception in tort law causation rules. In Fairchild v. Glenhaven Funeral Services Ltd [2002] UKHL 22 (Fairchild), the House of Lords created an exception in to the normal law of causation in torts for workers who had been exposed to asbestos dust …Read more
Tags: Asbestos,
Compensation,
Employment,
Job safety,
Lung disease,
Occupational disease,
Occupational hazards,
Occupational health and safety,
Respiratory diseases,
Safe working conditions,
Tort,
Workers' compensation
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2006] UKHL 46, [2007] 1 AC 412
Health Topics:
Sexual and reproductive health,
Violence Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment Facts: The House of Lords tried two asylum appeals together in this case: Secretary of State for the Home Department v. K (FC), and Fornah (FC) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department. The second case involved Fornah, a 15-year old girl from Sierra Leone who sought asylum in the United Kingdom on the grounds …Read more
Tags: Asylum,
Female genital mutilation,
Immigration,
Migrants,
Refugees,
Sexual violence,
Violence against women
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: Asylum and Immigration Tribunal
Citation: MH Sudan [2006] UKAIT 00033
Health Topics:
Disasters and emergencies,
Violence,
Water, sanitation and hygiene Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to life Facts: Appellant was a Sudanese citizen and a member of the Tama tribe from western Darfur. He entered the United Kingdom on March 6, 2004, potentially as a minor. He sought asylum claiming that his brothers had been killed by Janjaweed militia supported by the Sudanese government and that he would be killed if he returned …Read more
Tags: Armed conflict,
Asylum,
Drinking water,
Forced disappearance,
Forced displacement,
Humanitarian crisis,
Indigenous groups,
Manmade disaster,
Potable water,
Refugees
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland, Queen's Bench Division
Citation: [2006] EWHC 37 (Admin)
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Infectious diseases,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom of expression,
Right of access to information,
Right to family life,
Right to privacy Facts: The Applicant, Sue Axon, alleged that the Family Planning Association violated the rights of parents under article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) (right to respect for private and family life). The Association provided confidential advice and treatment regarding contraception, sexually transmitted infections and abortion to persons under the age of sixteen …Read more
Tags: Abortion,
Abortion counseling,
Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Birth control,
Childbirth,
Children,
Confidentiality,
Contraception,
Contraceptives,
Disclosure,
Family planning,
Maternal health,
Maternal mortality,
Minor,
Non-disclosure,
Notification,
Parental consent,
Parental notification,
Pregnancy,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
STDs,
STIs,
Termination of pregnancy
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: Supreme Court of Judicature, Queen's Bench Division, Divisional Court
Citation: [2006] EWHC 972 (Admin)
Health Topics:
Diet and nutrition,
Mental health,
Prisons,
Public safety,
Violence Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: The claimants were three men detained in Guantanamo Bay prison and their families. None of the claimants were British nationals, but each had been a long-term resident of the United Kingdom and two had family members who were UK citizens. Two of the claimants were refugees who has received asylum in the UK. Whilst in …Read more
Tags: Abuse,
Armed conflict,
Asylum,
Cruel and unusual punishment,
Cruel treatment,
Degrading treatment,
Depression,
Detainee,
Detention,
Humiliating treatment,
Hunger strike,
Immigration,
Inhuman treatment,
Jail,
Migrants,
Military,
Prison conditions,
Refugees,
Sexual abuse,
Solitary confinement,
Terrorism,
Threat of violence,
Torture
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2006
Court: Court of Appeal, Civil Division
Citation: [2006] EWCA Civ 392
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
Medicines Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to health,
Right to life Facts: The appellant Ann Rogers, suffered from type HER2 breast cancer, which was in its early stages. She had a poor prognosis of only a 25% chance of remaining free of breast cancer and a 43% chance of being alive at ten years. Herceptin was licensed by the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) for treatment of only …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
Budget,
Cancer,
Clinical trials,
Drug safety,
Health expenditures,
Health funding,
Noncommunicable diseases,
Out-of-pocket expenditures
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 31
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Medicines Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Freedom of movement and residence,
Right to health Facts: N, a Ugandan woman, came to London in Mach 1998 seeking asylum. Her application for asylum was rejected and the Secretary of State proposed to expel her. N was suffering from advanced HIV/AIDS, but had achieved a stable condition due to the extensive medical treatment and medication she had been receiving in the UK. If …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
Antiretrovirals,
ARVs,
Asylum,
Degrading treatment,
Essential medicines,
First-line treatment,
HIV,
HIV positive,
HIV status,
Immigration,
Inhuman treatment,
Migrants,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
PLHIV,
Refugees,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
STDs,
STIs,
Torture
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 23
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Medical malpractice,
Mental health,
Violence Human Rights: Right to due process/fair trial Facts: JD and MAK, parents of children with severe medical conditions, were wrongly suspected of child abuse through the misdiagnosis of their children by doctors. The ensuing investigation was conducted negligently. Each parent in consequence suffered psychiatric disorder and their family life was disrupted and they issued proceedings against the respective health authorities and individual doctors …Read more
Tags: Children,
Domestic abuse,
Duty of care,
Negligence,
Pediatric health,
Psychiatry,
Psychology,
Tort
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 68
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Mental health Human Rights: Right to family life Facts: K, the local authority initiated care proceedings to remove a child, E, from her parents, G and X. However, they were persuaded to agree to a short period of assessment at a specialist hospital and an interim care order was duly made under s 38(1)[1] of the Children Act 1989 (‘the Act’), including directions as …Read more
Tags: Child development,
Children,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Minor,
Psychiatry,
Psychology
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 66
Health Topics:
Diet and nutrition,
Poverty Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to housing,
Right to social security Facts: Section 95 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 (‘the Act’) authorized the Home Secretary to provide or arrange for the provision of support for asylum-seekers and their dependents who appeared to be destitute, as defined, or likely to become so within a prescribed period. L, A and T, from Angola, Ethiopia and the Sudan …Read more
Tags: Asylum,
Degrading treatment,
Humiliating treatment,
Hunger,
Immigration,
Indigent,
Inhuman treatment,
Migrants,
Poor,
Refugees,
Torture,
Underprivileged
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 58
Health Topics:
Hospitals,
Mental health Human Rights: Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to family life,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: Colonel Munjaz sought judicial review of Mersey Care NHS Trust’s (Mersey Care) policy on the seclusion of patients detained at the hospital. He claimed that the policy violated both domestic law and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), as incorporated into United Kingdom law by the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA). Colonel Munjaz was …Read more
Tags: Compulsory commitment,
Compulsory confinement,
Degrading treatment,
Inhuman treatment,
Involuntary commitment,
Involuntary confinement,
Mandatory commitment,
Mandatory confinement,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Psychiatry,
Public hospitals,
Seclusion
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 60
Health Topics:
Hospitals,
Informed consent,
Mental health Human Rights: Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: H challenged the provision of the Mental Health Act 1983 under which she was detained as incompatible with her right to liberty and security under Human Rights Act 1998. H was a 32-year old woman who was severely disabled by Down’s syndrome. H’s mother intensely distrusted health and social services, and refused on many occasions …Read more
Tags: Compulsory commitment,
Compulsory confinement,
Detention,
Incompetence,
Involuntary commitment,
Involuntary confinement,
Involuntary treatment,
Mandatory commitment,
Mandatory confinement,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Non-consensual testing and treatment,
Patient choice,
Psychiatry,
Psychology,
Unauthorized treatment
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: House of Lords
Citation: [2005] UKHL 2
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Medical malpractice Facts: Mr. Gregg consulted Dr. Scott, his general practitioner about a lump under his arm. Dr. Scott diagnosed the lump wrongfully as being benign. However, it was later discovered that the tumor was cancerous and had spread to various other parts of Mr. Gregg’s body. As a consequence of the Dr. Scott’s misdiagnosis, treatment for Mr. …Read more
Tags: Cancer,
Compensation,
Damages,
Duty of care,
Misdiagnosis,
Negligence,
Noncommunicable diseases,
Remedies,
Tort
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2005
Court: Asylum and Immigration Tribunal
Citation: [2005] UKAIT 00168
Health Topics:
HIV/AIDS,
Sexual and reproductive health,
Violence Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Freedom of movement and residence Facts: DW was a Jamaican citizen who sought asylum in the United Kingdom. He claimed to have been persecuted in Jamaica on the basis of his sexual orientation. He recounted two instances of being assaulted on the basis of being a homosexual. DW feared reporting these incidences to the police because he believed that they would …Read more
Tags: Assault,
Asylum,
Degrading treatment,
Gay,
HIV,
Homosexual,
Immigration,
Inhuman treatment,
Law enforcement,
LGBTI,
Migrants,
Police,
Queer,
Refugees,
Sexual orientation,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
Sodomy,
STDs,
STIs