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415 judgments found.
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2014
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 11577/06
Health Topics:
Mental health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: The applicant was severely disabled as a result of Down’s Syndrome. The applicant lived with her mother, her nearest relative. She often exhibited difficult behavior and towards the end of 2002 social workers had become extremely concerned about the impact on the physical and mental health of the applicant and her mother. On 31 January …Read more
Tags: Compulsory commitment,
Detainee,
Detention,
Incapacity,
Involuntary commitment,
Mandatory commitment,
Mental competence,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Mental retardation,
Psychiatry
Country:
Georgia Year: 2014
Court: Constitutional Court [საქართველოს საკონსტიტუციო სასამართლო]
Citation: Case #2/1/536
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Public safety Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination Facts: The Minister of Labour, Health and Social Affairs of Georgia issued orders by which “homosexuals” were prohibited from donating blood or its components. The plaintiffs self-identified as homosexuals and, accordingly were impacted by the order. The plaintiffs alleged that the regulations of the Minister of Labour, Health and Social Affairs of Georgia were in contradiction …Read more
Tags: AIDS,
Blood transfusion,
Hepatitis,
HIV,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
Smallpox,
STDs,
STIs,
Testing,
Transmission
Country:
India Year: 2014
Court: Supreme Court
Citation: [(2014) 5 SCC 438]
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
HIV/AIDS,
Sexual and reproductive health,
Violence Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom of expression,
Right to life,
Right to privacy Facts: Members of transgender community sought a legal declaration of their gender identity, instead of the male or female identity assigned to them at the time of their birth, claiming that that non-recognition of their gender identity violated Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution of India (the “Constitution”). Hijras and eunuchs, who were also members …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
AIDS,
Gender identity,
Gender reassignment,
HIV,
HIV positive,
Intersex,
LGBTI,
Most-at-risk,
Queer,
Sex reassignment,
Sexual assault,
Sexual orientation,
Sexual violence,
Transgender,
Transsexual
Country:
United States Year: 2014
Court: Supreme Court
Citation: 573 U.S. __ (2014)
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Hospitals,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom of expression Facts: The Commonwealth of Massachusetts amended its Reproductive Health Care Facilities Act (the “Act”), making it a crime to knowingly stand on a “public way or sidewalk” within 35 feet of an entrance or driveway to any abortion clinic. The Act exempted from this prohibition certain individuals, including “employees or agents of such facility acting within the scope …Read more
Tags: Abortion,
Abortion counseling,
Access to health care,
Awareness,
Clinics,
Counseling,
Health care professionals,
Health care workers,
Health facilities
Country:
Botswana Year: 2014
Court: High Court
Citation: (MAHGB-000057-14), BWHC 1 (2014)
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Medicines,
Prisons Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to health,
Right to life Facts: The applicants, two prisoners with HIV and an interested non-governmental organization, complain that the policy of denying Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (“HAART”) to non-citizen inmates is a violation of the rights of such non-citizen prisoners under the Constitution of Botswana. HAART is a drug treatment that helps control HIV mutation and reduces the likelihood of …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
ARVs,
Cruel and unusual punishment,
Cruel treatment,
Custody,
Degrading treatment,
Detainee,
Detention,
Health expenditures,
HIV,
HIV positive,
Imprisonment,
Incarceration,
Inhuman treatment,
Inmate,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
PLHIV,
TB,
Transmission,
Tuberculosis
Country:
Brazil Year: 2014
Court: Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Citation: Communication No. 10/2013; U.N. Doc. CRPD/C/12/D/10/2013
Health Topics:
Chronic and noncommunicable diseases,
Disabilities Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to work Facts: A Brazilian national, S.C., worked as a teller at a state-run bank. S.C. was involved in three motorcycle accidents, in 2006, 2007, and 2009. She underwent surgery in 2008 after the second accident. She took medical leave in 2009. Under the bank’s internal policy, she was required to return from medical leave within three months …Read more
Tags: Disabled,
Handicapped,
Noncommunicable diseases,
Physically challenged
Country:
Colombia Year: 2014
Court: Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
Citation: Report No. 5/14
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
HIV/AIDS,
Medicines,
Poverty,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to health,
Right to life,
Right to social security Facts: Duque and his same-sex partner lived together as a couple for over ten years, until his partner died from AIDS. Four years prior to the death, Duque was diagnosed with HIV and was being treated under support from his partner. When his partner died, Duque asked the COLFONDOS (the pension service) to ask what requirements …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
Antiretrovirals,
ARVs,
Domestic partnership,
Gay,
Health expenditures,
Health funding,
Health spending,
HIV,
HIV positive,
Homosexual,
LGBTI,
Low income,
Out-of-pocket expenditures,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
PLHIV,
Poor,
Queer,
Sexual orientation,
Social security
Country:
Bolivia Year: 2014
Court: Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
Citation: Report No. 72/14, Case 12.655; Merits I.V. BOLIVIA; August 15, 2014
Health Topics:
Informed consent,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to family life,
Right to privacy Facts: I.V. went to a hospital for a cesarean section and was sterilized by her doctor. She alleged that the only questions that the doctor had asked her before the procedure were where she had her first cesarean section and whether she had previously had an infection. I.V. maintained that she was not given any information …Read more
Tags: Compulsory sterilization,
Compulsory treatment,
Forced sterilization,
Forced treatment,
Health care professionals,
Informed choice,
Involuntary sterilization,
Involuntary treatment,
Non-consensual testing and treatment,
Patient choice,
Pregnancy,
Sterilization,
Unauthorized treatment
Country:
Kenya Year: 2014
Court: High Court of Kenya at Nairobi, (Constitutional and Human Rights Division)
Citation: Petition No. 266 of 2013
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to acquire nationality Facts: Baby A, was born with both male and female genitalia. The respondent, Kenyatta National Hospital issued E.A (the mother of Baby A) documents used in the process of carrying out genitogram tests, x-rays and scans of the Baby A in which the column indicating the child’s sex was filled in with a question mark. Baby …Read more
Tags: Child development,
Children,
Diagnostics,
Examination,
Health data,
Infant health,
Intersex,
Minor,
Parental consent,
Pediatric health
Country:
Canada Year: 2014
Court: Federal Court
Citation: (2014) FC 651
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
Poverty Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to health,
Right to life Facts: In 2012, the Governor-in-Council passed two orders modifying the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP), thereby reducing health insurance coverage for refugee and asylum claimants in Canada. Canadian Doctors for Refugee Care (CDRC) and two groups of lawyers challenged the changes to the program to restore better coverage as the changes had a significant negative impact …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Health expenditures,
Health funding,
Health insurance,
Health regulation,
Health spending,
Immigrants,
Immigration,
Migrants,
Out-of-pocket expenditures,
Refugees,
Reimbursement,
Social security
Country:
India Year: 2013
Court: Supreme Court
Citation: Civil Appeal No. 10972 of 2013
Health Topics:
HIV/AIDS,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to life,
Right to privacy Facts: Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (the Section) penalized voluntary “carnal intercourse against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal” and described them as “unnatural offences.” An offence under this Section was non-bailable and carried a maximum punishment of life imprisonment. Naz Foundation, the Petitioner, was an NGO working in …Read more
Tags: AIDS,
Bisexual,
Buggery,
Criminalization,
Gay,
Gender identity,
HIV,
Homosexual,
Law enforcement,
Lesbian,
LGBTI,
Sexual orientation,
Sodomy,
Transgender
Country:
India Year: 2013
Court: Supreme Court
Citation: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 349 of 2006
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Hospitals,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination Facts: The order is about the problem of sex-selective abortion in India. The Court assed the present situation and the various barriers that must be taken into account when States take steps to address this problem by raising awareness of the legal status of the issue. The Parliament has taken steps to prevent sex selective abortion …Read more
Tags: Abortion,
Abortion counseling,
Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Awareness,
Clinics,
Counseling,
Diagnostics,
Forced abortion,
Health care professionals,
Health care technology,
Health care workers,
Health data,
Health education,
Health facilities,
Health promotion,
Health records,
Infant mortality,
Maternal health,
Medical records,
Pregnancy,
Sex-selective abortion,
Termination of pregnancy,
Testing,
Unsafe abortion
Country:
Belize,
Trinidad and Tobago Year: 2013
Court: Caribbean Court of Justice
Citation: Tomlinson v. Belize and Trindad & Tobago, CCJ (2013); CCJ Application No. OA 2 of 2013
Health Topics:
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom of movement and residence Facts: The petitioner was a homosexual man and an LGBT activist who had traveled to Belize and Trinidad and Tobago; he had never been denied entry into either state. When he learned that section 5 of the Belize Immigration Act and section 8 of the Trinidad and Tobago prohibited homosexuals, prostitutes, or any person who living …Read more
Tags: Gay,
Homosexual,
Immigration,
LGBTI,
Migrants,
Queer,
Sexual orientation
Country:
Poland Year: 2013
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 46132/08
Health Topics:
Health information,
Medical malpractice,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to family life,
Right to life,
Right to privacy Facts: The applicant’s pregnant daughter died in 2004 of septic shock at Barlicki Hospital in Poland. The applicant alleged her daughter’s death was caused by negligence and filed claims under the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“Convention”) for violation of her daughter’s rights to life under Article 2, to freedom from …Read more
Tags: Abortion,
Conscientious objection,
Degrading treatment,
Disclosure,
Duty of care,
Health care professionals,
Health records,
Inadequate treatment,
Maternal health,
Maternal mortality,
Medical records,
Negligence,
Pregnancy; Termination of pregnancy,
Standard of care
Country:
New Zealand Year: 2013
Court: High Court
Citation: [2013] NZHC 1702
Health Topics:
Health systems and financing,
Hospitals,
Mental health,
Tobacco Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to privacy Facts: In this case applicants argued that the no-smoking policy of the Waitemata District Health Board (WDHB)and the consequent prohibition of smoking in hospitals and surrounding grounds violated their right not to be subjected to torture or cruel treatment, the right to be treated with humanity, the right to respect private life, and the right to …Read more
Tags: Cruel and unusual punishment,
Cruel treatment,
Health regulation,
Mental disorder,
Passive smoking,
Psychiatry,
Second-hand smoke,
Smoking,
Smoking cessation,
Tobacco control,
Tobacco regulation
Country:
Australia Year: 2013
Court: Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal Human Rights Division
Citation: [2013] VCAT 1869
Health Topics:
Disabilities,
Mental health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination Facts: Mr. Slattery brought this action in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (“the Tribunal”) alleging that the City Council of Manningham (“the Council”) had unfairly discriminated against him based on his disability. Slattery suffered from a series of mental impairments including bipolar disorder, attention deficit hyperactive disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Additionally, he acquired a …Read more
Tags: Bipolar,
Disabled,
Mental competence,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Psychiatry,
Psychology
Country:
Canada Year: 2013
Court: Ontario Superior Court of Justice
Citation: 2013 ONSC 5392
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
Mental health,
Public safety Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to life Facts: The Court examined the constitutionality of Brian’s Law, which was passed in 2000 after a man named Brian Smith was fatally shot by an untreated schizophrenic. The law included expanded committal criteria and allowed for involuntary admission for individuals who had experienced “substantial mental deterioration,”even if they were not necessarily a danger to others. In …Read more
Tags: Community-based care,
Compulsory commitment,
Compulsory confinement,
Examination,
Health regulation,
Incapacity,
Insanity,
Involuntary commitment,
Involuntary confinement,
Mandatory commitment,
Mandatory confinement,
Mental competence,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Psychiatry,
Schizophrenia,
Threat of violence
Country:
Canada Year: 2013
Court: British Columbia Supreme Court
Citation: 2013 BCSC 2309
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Poverty,
Prisons,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to family life,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: The plaintiffs brought a case before the British Columbia Supreme Court following the 2006-2007 decision by the Ministry of Public Safety to cancel the Mother Baby Program at the Alouette Correctional Centre for Women, a women’s prison. This program had allowed incarcerated mothers and their babies to live at the institution together, subject to the …Read more
Tags: Breastfeeding,
Child development,
Children,
Cruel and unusual punishment,
Custody,
Detainee,
Detention,
Imprisonment,
Incarceration,
Indigent,
Infant health,
Inmate,
Jail,
Low income,
Maternal health,
Pediatric health,
Poor,
Prison conditions,
Underprivileged
Country:
Russia Year: 2013
Court: The European Court of Human Rights
Citation: ECHR 171 (2013)
Health Topics:
Health information,
Hospitals,
Informed consent Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom of religion,
Right to privacy Facts: The applicant organization is a religious organization. Another organization wrote to the Russian president accusing the applicant organization of extremism and that an inquiry must be ensued into their activities. The letter was forwarded to the Prosecutor’s office and no violation was found. However, the applicant organization was not given access to the filed concerning …Read more
Tags: Clinics,
Confidentiality,
Disclosure,
Freedom of information,
Health data,
Health records,
Medical records,
Private hospitals,
Public hospitals,
Secrecy
Country:
Ireland Year: 2013
Court: Human Rights Committee
Citation: CCPR/C/116/D/2324/2013
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Health systems and financing,
Hospitals,
Mental health,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right of access to information,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to health,
Right to privacy Facts: The author of the communication stated that she became pregnant in 2011 and in her 21st week, she was informed that the foetus had congenital heart defects. She was further informed that the impairment might prove to be fatal. However the hospital told her that abortion was not possible in the current jurisdiction (Ireland) and …Read more
Tags: Abortion,
Abortion counseling,
Abortion technique,
Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Awareness,
Children,
Clinics,
Freedom of information,
Health expenditures,
Health facilities,
Health funding,
Health insurance,
Health regulation,
Health spending,
Infant health,
Infant mortality,
Minor,
Out-of-pocket expenditures,
Pediatric health,
Private hospitals,
Public hospitals,
Reimbursement,
Termination of pregnancy,
Trauma
Country:
Greece Year: 2013
Court: The European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Dismissal of an employee on account of his HIV infection was contrary to the European Convention on Human Rights
Health Topics:
HIV/AIDS Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to family life,
Right to work Facts: The applicant was an HIV-Positive Greece national who had been working in a jewelry manufacturing company, the staff of which urged their employer to dismiss the applicant so that their health and their right to work could be protected. The employer invited an occupational-health doctor who spoke and reassured the employees by explaining the precautions …Read more
Country:
Nigeria Year: 2012
Court: High Court of Lagos State
Citation: Suit No. ID/16272000
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
HIV/AIDS,
Infectious diseases,
Informed consent,
Medical malpractice,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Right to health Facts: The Plaintiff was a nurse at a medical centre. Defendants were the medical centre and a doctor at the centre. While employed at the medical centre, the Plaintiff became pregnant and developed a skin disorder. She sought medical attention and the Defendant doctor performed several diagnostic tests. Neither the nature nor the outcome of the tests …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
AIDS,
Compensation,
Compulsory testing,
Damages,
Duty of care,
Employment,
HIV,
HIV positive,
HIV status,
Informed choice,
Involuntary testing,
Mandatory testing,
Maternal health,
Miscarriage,
Negligence,
Non-consensual testing and treatment,
Patient choice,
People living with HIV/AIDS,
PLHIV,
Pregnancy,
Sexually transmitted diseases,
Sexually transmitted infections,
Standard of care,
STDs,
STIs,
Transmission
Country:
Slovenia Year: 2012
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 26828/06
Health Topics:
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
Poverty Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom of movement and residence,
Right to acquire nationality,
Right to family life,
Right to privacy Facts: The eight applicants had previously been citizens of both the former Yugoslavia and one of its constituent republics other than Slovenia. They had acquired permanent residence in Slovenia, but, following its independence, had either not requested Slovenian citizenship or had had their application refused. On 26 February 1992, pursuant to the newly enacted Aliens Act, …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Access to treatment,
Indigent,
Low income,
Poor,
Social security,
Underprivileged
Country:
United Kingdom Year: 2012
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: Application No. 2913/06; [2012] ECHR 1704
Health Topics:
Hospitals,
Mental health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Freedom of movement and residence,
Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to family life,
Right to liberty and security of person Facts: The Applicant, a UK citizen born in 1947, alleged that the seclusion policy (“Policy”) of Ashworth Special Hospital (“Ashworth”), the maximum security hospital where he was committed for a mental illness, violated the European Convention on Human Rights. After several instances of incarceration and hospitalization on account of various mental health issues, the applicant was …Read more
Tags: Compulsory commitment,
Compulsory confinement,
Cruel treatment,
Degrading treatment,
Detainee,
Detention,
Incompetence,
Inhuman treatment,
Involuntary commitment,
Involuntary confinement,
Isolation,
Mandatory commitment,
Mandatory confinement,
Mental competence,
Mental disability,
Mental disorder,
Mental illness,
Mental institution,
Mental retardation,
Psychiatry,
Psychology,
Public hospitals,
Seclusion,
Torture
Country:
Uganda Year: 2012
Court: Constitutional Court
Citation: Constitutional Petition No. 16 of 2011
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Health systems and financing,
Hospitals,
Medical malpractice,
Medicines,
Poverty,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to health,
Right to life Facts: The petitioners claimed that the lack of provision of basic health maternal commodities in Government Health Facilities and the negligent, unethical behavior of health workers toward expectant mothers in those facilities resulted in violations of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda (the “Constitution”). Specifically, the petitioners claimed violations of the right to health and …Read more
Tags: Access to drugs,
Access to health care,
Access to medicines,
Access to treatment,
Childbirth,
Children,
Cruel treatment,
Degrading treatment,
Essential medicines,
Health care professionals,
Health care workers,
Health expenditures,
Health facilities,
Health funding,
Health spending,
Humiliating treatment,
Inadequate treatment,
Inappropriate treatment,
Indigent,
Infant health,
Infant mortality,
Inhuman treatment,
Low income,
Maternal health,
Maternal mortality,
Midwifery,
Negligence,
Out-of-pocket expenditures,
Pediatric health,
Poor,
Pregnancy,
Primary care,
Public hospitals,
Remedies,
Subsidies,
Underprivileged
Country:
Slovakia Year: 2012
Court: European Court of Human Rights
Citation: N.B. v Slovakia, App. No. 29518/10, Eur. Ct. H.R. (2012).
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Health care and health services,
Hospitals,
Informed consent,
Medical malpractice,
Mental health,
Sexual and reproductive health Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to family life Facts: Ms. N.B. was of Roma ethnic origin. She was sterilized at a public hospital, at the age of 17, during the birth of her second child. Ms. N.B. asserted that she had been coerced into signing authorizations for her sterilization, that she was segregated within the hospital due to her ethnicity and that the decision …Read more
Tags: Caesarean,
Childbirth,
Children,
Compensation,
Compulsory sterilization,
Compulsory treatment,
Cruel treatment,
Degrading treatment,
Family planning,
Forced sterilization,
Forced treatment,
Health care professionals,
Health care workers,
Humiliating treatment,
In utero fertilization,
Inappropriate treatment,
Infertility,
Informed choice,
Inhuman treatment,
Involuntary sterilization,
Involuntary treatment,
Mandatory sterilization,
Mandatory treatment,
Maternal health,
Minor,
Non-consensual testing and treatment,
Parental consent,
Patient choice,
Pregnancy,
Public hospitals,
Remedies,
Sterilization,
Unauthorized treatment
Country:
Guatemala Year: 2012
Court: Inter-American Court of Human Rights
Health Topics:
Child and adolescent health,
Diet and nutrition,
Health care and health services,
Health information,
Health systems and financing,
Hospitals,
Poverty,
Violence,
Water, sanitation and hygiene Human Rights: Freedom from discrimination,
Freedom from torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment,
Freedom of movement and residence,
Freedom of religion,
Right to bodily integrity,
Right to development,
Right to due process/fair trial,
Right to family life,
Right to liberty and security of person,
Right to life,
Right to privacy,
Rights to the benefits of culture Facts: This case deals with the destruction of the Mayan community of Río Negro by a series of massacres perpetrated by the Guatemalan army and members of the civil self-defence patrols in 1980 and 1982 which, according to the IACmHR, included the persecution and elimination of members of the Mayan community, subsequent violations directed against the …Read more
Tags: Access to health care,
Assault,
Budget,
Child development,
Children,
Health promotion,
Low income,
Malnutrition,
Minor,
Poor,
Potable water,
Public hospital,
Rape,
Safe drinking water,
Sewage,
Sexual violence,
Violence against women