Appeal Court: Unlawful for hospitals to refuse urgent treatment to migrants
marker | 30.03.2009 15:21 | Health | Migration | Palestine
Press release 30.3.2009: The Court of Appeal has today ruled that Department of Health guidance which forbade hospitals from providing temporary healthcare to destitute migrants with chronic illnesses is unlawful.
The case involved a Palestinian, A (1), with chronic liver disease who was initially refused the treatment he needed to prevent liver failure. When his asylum claim was refused he had agreed to return to the West Bank but was unable to due to Israeli travel restrictions. The hospital refused to treat him because of Department of Health guidance. After starting urgent High Court action, the hospital agreed to treat him, but he continued his case arguing that the guidance was unlawful and it was preventing thousands of other refused asylum-seekers from accessing urgent treatment. In the High Court, Mr. Justice Mitting agreed that refused asylum-seekers could be entitled to free treatment if they had been here long enough and were following the rules, but the government appealed.
The Court of Appeal rejected the High Court’s approach, finding that refused asylum-seekers could not be lawfully resident in the UK. But they still found that the guidance was unlawful, because it did not make it clear enough that hospitals must consider providing treatment where a patient cannot return home and cannot pay for the treatment in advance.
Solicitor Adam Hundt of Pierce Glynn, a firm specialising in human rights cases commented:
“The Dept. of Health guidance said that hospitals should not provide treatment unless patients paid for it in advance, but this ignores the fact that many of these patients, like A, are destitute, and many cannot return home, so they are not treated until they require life-saving treatment.
In my experience, sadly, by that time it is often too late, and that treatment is usually far more expensive, so the current rules don’t make clinical, economic or humanitarian sense, and I am glad that the Court has recognised this.
I hope that the Dept of Health will now make it clear to hospitals that they must treat patients who cannot pay and cannot return home for the time being - and not just wait until they are at death’s door.”
Medact / Medecins Du Monde / Pierce Glynn Solicitors
(1) An anonymity order has been granted, and so the client can only be referred to as Mr A.
The Court of Appeal rejected the High Court’s approach, finding that refused asylum-seekers could not be lawfully resident in the UK. But they still found that the guidance was unlawful, because it did not make it clear enough that hospitals must consider providing treatment where a patient cannot return home and cannot pay for the treatment in advance.
Solicitor Adam Hundt of Pierce Glynn, a firm specialising in human rights cases commented:
“The Dept. of Health guidance said that hospitals should not provide treatment unless patients paid for it in advance, but this ignores the fact that many of these patients, like A, are destitute, and many cannot return home, so they are not treated until they require life-saving treatment.
In my experience, sadly, by that time it is often too late, and that treatment is usually far more expensive, so the current rules don’t make clinical, economic or humanitarian sense, and I am glad that the Court has recognised this.
I hope that the Dept of Health will now make it clear to hospitals that they must treat patients who cannot pay and cannot return home for the time being - and not just wait until they are at death’s door.”
Medact / Medecins Du Monde / Pierce Glynn Solicitors
(1) An anonymity order has been granted, and so the client can only be referred to as Mr A.
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Additions
full text of judgement
30.03.2009 16:51
Attached is a pdf of the court of appeal judgement. Note that on the front page, the hearing dates are incorrect (should be 2008, not 2009)
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