The Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans cases were high-profile cases involving disagreements between the parents of young infants and medical practitioners, which have given impetus to pre-existing calls for law reform that have been rebranded as ‘Charlie’s Law’ and ‘Alfie’s Law’. I argue against the proposal to replace the best interest test, which is currently determinative in such contentious cases, with a significant harm test, as it would render UK law divergent from international law. I also employ critical theory to rebut the notion that parents are the best decision makers and refute criticisms of clinicians (who reflexively acknowledged the limits of medicine). I utilise theories of distributive justice to demonstrate that legal reform m...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
Where parents seek treatment for their young child that healthcare professionals cannot agree to, th...
Recently, the English courts have dealt with a number high-profile, emotive disputes over the care o...
The application by Great Ormond Street Hospital to court in respect of the future medical treatment ...
Free to read on publisher website Much of the commentary in the wake of the Charlie Gard litigation ...
Examines Great Ormond Street Hospital v Yates (CA) on whether the court had the inherent jurisdictio...
Who should have the ultimate say over a child's medical treatment? A series of high-profile withdraw...
This article critically examines the legal arguments presented on behalf of Charlie Gard’s parents, ...
Calls for a harm threshold to mediate the best interests test have gained momentum following the cas...
This article considers proposals to reform the law in response to recent high profile cases concerni...
When baby Charlie Gard was diagnosed with a rare mitochondrial disease, his parents located a Profes...
In this commentary I examine the litigation over the medical treatment of Charlie Gard from the High...
The Tafida Raqeeb case comprised both a judicial review and a determination of Tafida’s best interes...
The cases of Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans placed the withdrawal of treatment from terminally ill inf...
This paper will look at how the best interests test in English lawhas been extended from its traditi...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
Where parents seek treatment for their young child that healthcare professionals cannot agree to, th...
Recently, the English courts have dealt with a number high-profile, emotive disputes over the care o...
The application by Great Ormond Street Hospital to court in respect of the future medical treatment ...
Free to read on publisher website Much of the commentary in the wake of the Charlie Gard litigation ...
Examines Great Ormond Street Hospital v Yates (CA) on whether the court had the inherent jurisdictio...
Who should have the ultimate say over a child's medical treatment? A series of high-profile withdraw...
This article critically examines the legal arguments presented on behalf of Charlie Gard’s parents, ...
Calls for a harm threshold to mediate the best interests test have gained momentum following the cas...
This article considers proposals to reform the law in response to recent high profile cases concerni...
When baby Charlie Gard was diagnosed with a rare mitochondrial disease, his parents located a Profes...
In this commentary I examine the litigation over the medical treatment of Charlie Gard from the High...
The Tafida Raqeeb case comprised both a judicial review and a determination of Tafida’s best interes...
The cases of Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans placed the withdrawal of treatment from terminally ill inf...
This paper will look at how the best interests test in English lawhas been extended from its traditi...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
Where parents seek treatment for their young child that healthcare professionals cannot agree to, th...
Recently, the English courts have dealt with a number high-profile, emotive disputes over the care o...