Medical Negliegence and Liability of Health Professionals in the European Court of Human Rights Case Law

  • Jasna Murgel DOBA, Faculty of Applied Business and Social Studies
Keywords: state’s responsibility, the right to health, the right to life, prohibition of torture, the right to private and family life

Abstract

Although the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) does not explicitly lay down the right to health, it can be derived from the long-term jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) which interpreted certain provisions of the ECHR (in particular articles concerning the right to life, the prohibition of torture and inhuman conduct and the right to private and family life). Based on the ECtHR jurisprudence it may be concluded that the ECHR, albeit implicitly, refers to the right to health as well. It regulates negative obligations reflected in the prohibition of interference with a certain right. It can also be interpreted as setting positive obligations of the states to ensure the exercise of the right to health, although the extent of that positive obligation is still not fully defined. The present contribution focuses on a single segment of the right to health in the practice of the ECtHR, i.e. the Court’s interpretation of the state’s responsibility for medical negligence, especially in the last few years.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Jasna Murgel, DOBA, Faculty of Applied Business and Social Studies

Maribor, Slovenia. E-mail: jasnamurgel7@gmail.com.

References

Božič Penko, A. (2017) Nekatera pravna vprašanja z zvezi z odgovornostjo za zdravniško napako v sodni praksi, Pravni letopis, pp. 69-88 (Inštitut za primerjalno pravo pri Pravni fakulteti v Ljubljani).

Da Lomba, S. (2014) The ECHR, Health Care and Irregular Migrants, In Freeman M, Hawkes, S. & Benett, B. (eds.) Law and Global Health: Current Legal Issue, Vol. 16 (Oxford University Press), pp. 149-164.

Graham, L. (2017) The European Court of Human Rights and the Emerging Right to Health, OxHRH Blog, 11 May 2017, retrieved from: http://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/the-european-court-of-humanrights-and-the-emerging-right-to-health (15. 1. 2020).

Handbook on European non-discrimination law (2018) (Luxembourg: Council of Europe and the European Union, Publications Office of the European Union).

Harris, D. J., O’Boyle, M., Bates, E. P. & Buckley, C. M. (2014) Law of the European Convention on Human Rights, 3rd ed. (Oxford University Press), pp. 212-213.

McHale, J. (2010) Fundamental rights and health care, In: Mossialos, E., Permanand, G., Baeten, R. & Hervey, T. K. (eds.) Health System Governance in Europe. The Role of European Union Law and Policy (Cambridge University Press), pp. 282-314.

Ovčak Kos, M. & Božič Penko, A. (2018) Dileme v primerih odškodninskega prava v zvezi z odgovornostjo za medicinsko napako (2.), Odvetnik, 84(1), pp. 10-17.

Žnidaršič Skubic, V. (2018) Civilno medicinsko pravo. Izbrane teme (Ljubljana: Uradni list Republike Slovenije).

Published
2020-04-24
How to Cite
Murgel J. (2020). Medical Negliegence and Liability of Health Professionals in the European Court of Human Rights Case Law. Medicine, Law & Society, 13(1), 21-44. https://doi.org/10.18690/mls.13.1.21-44.2020
Section
Articles