6533b7d5fe1ef96bd12653ef

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Autonomía y pacientes reclusos

V Bellver-capellaJc Galán-cortésD Serrat-moréC Mínguez-gallegoJ García-guerreroR Blanco-sueiro

subject

medicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectPrisiónLiabilityPrisonContext (language use)social sciencesGeneral MedicineCriminologyHigh CourtLegislación &ampAffect (psychology)Negativa del Paciente al TratamientoAdministration (probate law)HarmmedicineJurisprudenciaAutonomía PersonalPsychiatryPsychologyAutonomymedia_common

description

The authors study a recent Spanish High Court decision declaring liability on the Administration’s part for the death of an inmate in a prison hospital. We analyse the Court’s decision using legal, ethical, medical and social perspectives. The conclusions are that: 1. the Administration has no legitimate right to force a prisoner to take medical treatment, except in circumstances in which there is a grave and definite risk to the patient’s life, or when the patient lacks capacity or when there is the risk of harm to the health of third parties; 2. That in the case of health decision making that might affect a patient, the Court has mounted a frontal attack on the autonomy of patients in prison; 3. That from a medical point of view the decision is discriminatory since it does not apply the same standards of measurement to all chronic illnesses that might be found in the prison context; 4. That it is inapplicable in daily practice due to the fact that its strictness of application would seriously affect the already highly fragile ordered coexistence that exists in a prison.

http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1575-06202007000200004