Protection of the right to self-determination Social context and kinds of actions (lawsuits). Biomedical science and technology make it possible to know.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Civil & criminal law Civil Law.
Advertisements

Wrongful Life Case Study (Cass. 2 ottobre 2012 n ) Prof. Avv. Bruno Tassone Docente di Principles of Civil Law LUISS Guido Carli.
Q3 LAW NOTES 1 TORTS.
Gerri Spinella Ed.D. Elizabeth McDonald Ed.D.
Abortion: Pro-Life View  The state or the government should intervene in the women’s decision, and should prevent women from having an abortion in many.
PA 165 Introduction to Torts Unit 7 Lecture 1. Unit 6 Review Premises liability Vicarious liability Defenses for negligence.
Chapter 18: Torts A Civil Wrong
Law I Chapter 18.
Chapter 18 Torts.
Chapter 16 Lesson 1 Civil and Criminal Law.
Chapter 3 Tort Law.
Ethical AND legal issues in GENETICS. objective 1- introduction. 2-major needs in study of ethics. 3-Ethical Principles in Medicine. 4-The Special Position.
Bioethical Challenges for the Rehabilitation Counselor.
Genetic testing By: Bronwyn Peat. What is genetic testing?  Genetic Testing: it is a test that involves taking a sample from someone’s blood, hair, skin.
Family Friendly Employment Rights The Government has introduced a range of new employment rights designed to help working parents. In addition to amendments.
Wrongful Birth Claims Medical Legal Issues in Obstetrics Practice.
 A body of rights, obligations, and remedies that is applied by courts in civil proceedings to provide relief for persons who have suffered harm from.
IVF: Moral & Social Issues. What is IVF In Vitro Fertilization IVF embryos are embryos created in a laboratory ‘Test-tube’ babies.
Equality act 2010 A quick guide in 20 slides
1 REMEDIES FOR BREACH OF CONTRACT. 2 When one of the parties to the contract makes a breach of the contract the following remedies are available to the.
Copyright © 2004 by Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 5 Intentional Torts.
Abortion Facts Which ones are the most surprising ?
Chapter 18.  Criminal Law: crime against the state  Civil Law: person commits a wrong, not always a violation of law  Plaintiff-the harmed individual,
Parental Rights: Father’s Rights in Abortion
Continuity Clinic Liability Insurance 101 Modified from information on
IndexVocabularyWhat is IVFThe LawStatistics Christianity and Fertility Worries Christian Attitudes to Fertility Treatment Vocabulary The Law What is IVF?
Problems in Prenatal Development
Medical Genetics 20 遗传咨询 Genetic Counseling. Medical Genetics Genetic counseling is the process evaluating family history and medical records ordering.
Teachers and the Law, 8 th Edition © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Teachers and the Law, 8e by David Schimmel, Leslie R. Stellman,
Unit 6 – Civil Law.
Birth Related Torts Edward P. Richards Director, Program in Law, Science, and Public Health Harvey A. Peltier Professor of Law Louisiana State University.
So that’s why I’d like to have a gene test. To see if I carry any bad genes. I’m not going to stay a bachelor forever. At least, not if Kate has her.
Human Development: Prenatal-Toddler Problems in Prenatal Development.
The Parenthood Decision
Personal Injury Damages o Two kinds of Damages o Economic Harm o Hospital bills, lost wages, etc. o Pain & Suffering o Continuing pain, mental anguish,
Chapter 20 Negligence. The failure to exercise a reasonable amount of care in either doing or not doing something resulting in harm or injury.
Responsible for unborn life
Torts A.K.A. civil law. What’s a Tort? Torts more or less means “wrongs” Refers to civil laws Based on both common law (decisions made by judges) and.
Religion and Early Life By Rishi, Conrad and Max.
The Role of the Courts.
NEGLIGENCE “Carelessness” or “Not to give proper care”
STDs and Abstinence Family Health Unit Lecture 7.
Corporate and Business Law (ENG). 2 Designed to give you knowledge and application of: Section B: The Law of Obligations B1. Formation of contract B2.
Civil Law An overview of Tort Law – the largest branch of civil law Highlight the differences between tort law and criminal law How torts developed historically.
The right not to be born and the wrongful life action Comparative analysis between Civil and Common Law systems -The french Perruche case -Latest Italian.
INTRODUCTION TO LAW OF TORTS. WHAT IS TORT? TORT IS A FRENCH WORD WHICH IS DERIVED FROM THE LATIN WORD “TORTUS” WHICH MEANS TO TWIST AND IMPLIES CONDUCT.
Torts: A Civil Wrong Chapter 18. The Idea of Liability Under criminal law, wrongs committed are called crimes. Under civil law, wrongs committed are called.
TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Chapter 18. TORTS: A CIVIL WRONG Under criminal law, wrongs committed are called crimes. Under civil law, wrongs committed are called.
CHAPTER 18 PART I Torts: A Civil Wrong. A Civil Wrong In criminal law, when someone commits a wrong, we call it a crime. In civil law, when someone commits.
Introduction to Healthcare Law & Society. Is there a right to healthcare? International law? World Health Organisation WHO definition of health as “a.
Chapter 18. Understand the primary goals of tort law: (1) fair and efficient settlement of disputes; (2) compensation for those suffering damages; (3)
 In some circumstances, responsibility lies not only with the person undertaking (or failing to undertake) an action, but also with an individual responsible.
Negligence Tort law establishes standards for the care that people must show to one another. Negligence is the conduct that falls below this standard.
Chapter 4.2: Problems in Prenatal Development
Civil Law An overview of Tort Law – the largest branch of civil law
The Children Act 1989 Allocates duties to local authorities, courts, parents and other agencies in the United Kingdom to ensure children are Safeguarded.
Parental Rights: Father’s Rights in Abortion
Life Cycle Unit 6 Lesson 1.
Bellwork.
What’s Your Health IQ? True or False
Torts.
Explain the nature of liability insurance
20 遗传咨询 Genetic Counseling
Law, the Courts, and Contracts
Growth and Development
LO: To explore the rights of those involved in the pregnancy
Lesson 6-1 Civil Law (Tort Law).
Torts A Civil Wrong.
Presentation transcript:

Protection of the right to self-determination Social context and kinds of actions (lawsuits). Biomedical science and technology make it possible to know in advance whether a child will be born with certain defects or diseases. These techniques bring with them the possibility of their wrong or incompetent application: doctors may fail to perform the tests which could lead to the discovery of malformations; sometimes the tests are made but the outcome is misdiagnosed. The consequence is often the birth of an impaired child, which has become the object of two different kinds of lawsuits (wrongful birth and wrongful life). dr R. Strugała WPAiE

Wrongful conception Cause of action for damages The parents sue: the claimant the laboratory or the physician: the defandand for their negligence dr R. Strugała WPAiE

Wrongful conception (birth) birth of an unwanted or unplanned child caused by someone else's wrongful conduct What is really wrongful is the conduct of a doctor or another third party that caused or did not prevent the conception Wrongful conception – an apt term dr R. Strugała WPAiE

Wrongful life cause of action for damages A wrongful life claim is a claim by a child - a disabled child, (issued by its representatives, i.e. the parents) acting as claimant against a doctor: defandand for having to live a life full of suffering because of a handicap while the child was not supposed to have been born at all but was born anyway because of a negligent act by the doctor or an assistant. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

The notion and historical background The notion of wrongful life derives from a decision of the Appellate Court of Illinois, Zepeda v. Zepeda, where a wealthy child sued his father for allowing him to be born illegitimate: the plaintiff seeks damages for the deprivation of his right to be a legitimate child, to have a normal home, to have a legal father, to inherit from his father, to inherit from his paternal ancestors and for being stigmatized as a bastard dr R. Strugała WPAiE

The notion and historical background The recognition of the plaintiff's claim would mean to create a new tort, as a consequence, 'encouragement would extend to all others born into the world under conditions they might regard as adverse. One might seek damages for being born of a certain colour, another because of race; one for being born with a hereditary disease, another for inheriting unfortunate family characteristics; one for being born into a large and destitute family, another because a parent has an unsavoury reputation' dr R. Strugała WPAiE

The historical background II In 1980 the Court of Appeals of Michigan had to decide a case, Grodin v. Grodin, where the child sued his own mother because she continued to take drugs during pregnancy, not having realised that she was already seven or eight months pregnant. As a result of his mother's taking the drug, the child had developed teeth that were brown and discoloured. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

Wrongful conception/life – medical malpractice If one fails to order or correctly perform prenatal tests as to the state of health of the foetus, if for instance a chromosome test is not carried out properly (a case of wrongful genetic counselling), a handicapped child might be born where otherwise, had the testing been done correctly, the pregnancy would have been terminated by the parents. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

Wrongful conception/life On the one hand the wrongful birth action: the parents sue the laboratory or the physician for his negligence; on the other hand the wrongful life action which is brought by or on behalf of the disabled child himself, sometimes even against his own parents. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

German case law The German Bundegerichtshof decided an emblematic case in 1983: the parents of a disabled child, prior to the conception of a second one, undergo some genetic tests in order to determine if the same disease might show up in the unborn. The physician reassures the parents but the child is affected by the same disease as the elder sister. The court condemns the physician to pay DM as moral damage as well as to provide for the child's rearing. According to the court, a complete and correct information would have prevented the couple from the conception of the child. Their aim was not only not to give birth to an impaired child, but also not to be exposed to the economic consequences deriving from that birth. As the physician had knowledge of it, he had taken full responsibility of avoiding such consequences; therefore he has to be considered liable dr R. Strugała WPAiE

German case law Holding the physician liable for the birth of the impaired child, the Bundegerichtshof also discussed whether considering the costs of rearing a child as a damage means establishing the equivalence of 'existence of the child and damage': their response was negative. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

USA – case law The liability of the physician or of the laboratories and the consequent acknowlegment of the right to get compensation for damage is recognised in the United States as well. For example the physician who fails to inform the parents that their blood tests revealed that they both were sickle cell carriers and that there was a risk of them bearing a child with sickle cell disease is condemned to the payment of all expenses "associated with the pregnancy" which include medical expenses, pain and suffering, and lost wages for a reasonable period, as well as damages for any "emotional distress causally resulting from" the wrongful conception. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

English case law In 1993, in England the Court of Appeals, condemned the physician to the payment of a great amount of money, because the parents had not been informed that a reviously aborted child had been impaired. They conceived another child who was born suffering from bifid spine. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

French case law In France the Cour de Cassation, in 1996, decided the case of a physician who had excluded the possibility of genetic transmission of the neurological diseases which affected the husband. The child suffered from the same disease as the father: the physician was condemned 'pour réparer les conséquences dommageables définitives des troubles de l'enfant' with respect both of the parents and of the child. dr R. Strugała WPAiE

The scope of compensation pregnancy extra disability costs upbringing costs ? (the child, or perhaps a parent, is disabled, and limited to the extra costs attributable to the disability (‘extra’ compared to the cost for a non- disabled person). dr R. Strugała WPAiE