‘Turning up the volume’: Increasing respect for the wishes and feelings of women with intellectual impairment in decisions about their reproductive rights in England and New Zealand

Q2 Social Sciences
J. Manning
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Abstract

In 2004 a New Zealand Family Court Judge ordered that two extremely serious and irreversible interventions (termination of pregnancy and sterilization) be carried out on a 29-year-old woman, with mild to moderate intellectual disability, over her strenuous objection. Though her appeal was partially successful, an option which both respected her wishes and feelings and in all likelihood better promoted her best interests was not explored. A decade later, another Family Court judge held that it was in the best interests of a young woman with Down syndrome to be sterilized for contraceptive purposes, in spite of her indication that she might wish to have babies one day. The decisions were made under NZ’s adult guardianship legislation, into which courts have incorporated a best interests principle, which they have interpreted broadly. But, in contrast to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA), NZ’s statute lacks any requirement for decision-makers to take into account the wishes and feelings of the person with mental impairment. That requirement has been the catalyst for a more-empathetic, person-centric interpretation in English case law. Further reform to the MCA is advocated for, which would give formal primacy to P’s wishes and feelings through presumptions or special phrases, as well as requiring a reasoned justification for departing from them. The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities goes even further: the article 12 right to legal capacity requires respect for the ‘will and preferences’ of people with mental impairments and controversially, according to the UN Committee’s interpretation, requires the replacement of substitute decision-making regimes based on best interests with supported decision-making frameworks based on a person’s will and preferences.
“提高音量”:在英国和新西兰,在决定生育权利时,越来越尊重智障女性的意愿和感受
2004年,新西兰家庭法院的一名法官不顾一名29岁轻度至中度智力残疾妇女的强烈反对,下令对她进行两项极其严重和不可逆转的干预措施(终止妊娠和绝育)。尽管她的上诉部分成功,但没有探讨一个既尊重她的意愿和感受,又很可能更好地促进她最大利益的选择。十年后,另一位家庭法院法官认为,尽管患有唐氏综合症的年轻女性表示有一天她可能希望生孩子,但出于避孕目的进行绝育手术符合她的最大利益。这些决定是根据新西兰的成人监护立法做出的,法院在该立法中纳入了最佳利益原则,并对其进行了广泛解释。但是,与2005年《精神能力法》(MCA)相比,新西兰的法规没有要求决策者考虑精神障碍者的意愿和感受。这一要求一直是英国判例法中更具同理心、以人为中心的解释的催化剂。主张对MCA进行进一步改革,通过假设或特殊短语将P的愿望和感受正式置于首位,并要求有合理的理由偏离这些愿望和感受。《残疾人权利公约》更进一步:第12条的法律行为能力要求尊重精神障碍者的“意愿和偏好”,根据联合国委员会的解释,要求以基于个人意愿和偏好的有支持的决策框架取代基于最大利益的替代决策制度。
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来源期刊
Medical Law International
Medical Law International Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The scope includes: Clinical Negligence. Health Matters Affecting Civil Liberties. Forensic Medicine. Determination of Death. Organ and Tissue Transplantation. End of Life Decisions. Legal and Ethical Issues in Medical Treatment. Confidentiality. Access to Medical Records. Medical Complaints Procedures. Professional Discipline. Employment Law and Legal Issues within NHS. Resource Allocation in Health Care. Mental Health Law. Misuse of Drugs. Legal and Ethical Issues concerning Human Reproduction. Therapeutic Products. Medical Research. Cloning. Gene Therapy. Genetic Testing and Screening. And Related Topics.
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