Widow takes legal action against MoD

May 29th, 2009

Widow takes legal action against MoD

A woman whose husband was killed in Baghdad is taking legal action against the Ministry of Defence (MoD) for negligence.

Corporal David Williams was killed in 2005 when his plane was hit by missiles shortly after take-off in the Iraqi capital, This is Bath attests.

His wife Kathryn has lodged a high court writ claiming that the MoD had not ensured that the Hercules was airworthy and was therefore in breach of human rights and workplace safety regulations.

A spokesperson from the MoD said: "The MoD awaits the full details of this legal challenge from the families’ lawyers. Compensation is always paid in cases where there is a proven legal liability."

In March, the MoD admitted liability for the explosion of an RAF Nimrod in 2006, paving the way for the families of the deceased to claim six-figure sums in compensation.

The organisation admitted that it had not provided proper safety procedures and had not installed equipment that would have alerted crew to problems onboard.

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Many patients’ human rights ‘violated’

June 20th, 2008

Many hospital patients in the UK are having their human rights violated while under anaesthetic, it has been claimed.

Writing in the Student British Medical Journal, medical ethics specialist Dr Gershon Grunfeld said that medical students are intimately examining unconscious patients without their approval.

"Performing intimate examinations on patients without their explicit consent is a gross violation of the principle of respect for patients’ autonomy," he said.

Current guidelines state that patients must give their permission before being examined in such a way, reports the Metro.

Dr Grunfeld found that the guidelines are often ignored, or are not fully understood, by medical staff and called for hospitals to establish procedures whereby patients can volunteer to help with teaching.

He also commented: "Medical students must put their responsibility towards patients before any learning opportunity."

Last year, it was also reported that the human rights of elderly patients were not being adequately protected in many hospitals and care homes.
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