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Medicine The Courts United Kingdom

Woman Who Inherited Huntington's Disease Sues Doctors (bbc.com) 142

AmiMoJo writes: A woman is suing a London NHS trust for not revealing her father had been diagnosed with Huntington's disease before she had her own child. She only discovered he carried the gene for the degenerative, incurable brain disorder after her daughter was born. The woman then found out she too carried the faulty gene, meaning her daughter has a 50% chance of having it.

The story is tragic. In 2007 her father murdered her mother and was found to have Huntington's, which often results in confusion and violent behavior. She was already pregnant at the time and her father asked that she not be told as he feared she would abort the pregnancy. Doctors were in a bind, with doctor-patient confidentiality on one hand and a duty of care on the other. The woman is arguing that in cases of serious inherited diseases children should have a right to know. She says if she had known she would not have had a child, who has a 50:50 chance of also having Huntington's and will one day have to look after her confused and possibly violent mother.

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Woman Who Inherited Huntington's Disease Sues Doctors

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  • But why is this on /.?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      Must be some SJW angle.

    • Issues of genetics and how we approach them is both stuff that matters and has a science policy aspect that falls under news for nerds. So under both the two parts of the classic Slashdot motto, this is relevant.
    • Fair point until you take the next little logical step which brings us back to "The World's First Gattaca Baby Tests Are Finally Here" https://science.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Medical science. As we develop the ability to test for these kinds of diseases these issues will come up ever more frequently, and we should be thinking about how we intend to handle them.

      Genetic privacy is a hot topic right now because genetic testing is getting cheap and accessible. It throws up ethical issues - if you find some genetic issue in one person that might affect others in their family how do you balance privacy and the duty of care?

      • if you find some genetic issue in one person that might affect others in their family how do you balance privacy and the duty of care?

        The answer to that question is simple. Humans have an inherent right to privacy. There must be a compelling interest to violate that right. The impact is strictly between two individuals which lacks sufficient compelling interest to violate the rights of an individual. The instances where it is a compelling interest to violate the privacy rights of an individual occur when it is known that it can impact multiple individuals such as in the case of communicable diseases.

        The information in question is between

    • Because Genetics.

      Wishing I hadn't spent my mod points on another article...

  • Rules? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @10:05PM (#59428756)

    Not sure how the privacy laws work in England, but in the US you have no right to anyone else's medical records, including your family, excepting anyone you have power of attorney for (spouse, children, etc...)

    So unless instructed otherwise, in the US at least, the doctor's couldn't tell the daughter.

    • You can assign a health care proxy to make decisions on your behalf, and have access to your records. You can also elect to allow other individuals to have general or specific access. It requires affirmative consent, but it can be done.
    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      Not sure how the privacy laws work in England, but in the US you have no right to anyone else's medical records

      The flip side of "rights" is duties, which is what this case is about. The doctor (1) arguably has a duty of care to the woman in question since the woman was under the doctor's care, and (2) has a duty of confidentiality to her father. Is it a slam dunk that the second duty outweighs the first? The law says there are three factors to decide whether it's a slam dunk... https://www.1cor.com/london/20... [1cor.com]

      (1) If you can't reasonably foresee injury to the woman, then it's a slam dunk that confidentiality wins. (

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      The laws may be what they may be, but this is the same UK doctors and government which insist they have the right to decide when to euthanize your child and whether you can seek additional medical care for them. Agree or disagree with those past decisions, the assertion is they are the knowing ones capable of deciding best to the point that you only get to observe the outcome. But as soon as the nanny fails to intervene intelligently, suddenly it's because civil liberties and individual autonomy trump all

      • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

        All the doctors had to do was say, "We highly recommend you get a screening for genetic abnormalities."

        I could see that as being a plausible work-around the privacy laws in this case. The doctors aren't allowed to tell the patient directly, but there's nothing stopping them from ordering a genetic screening test for a different patient, as long as they don't say "we're ordering this screening test because of your dad."

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      How about the case where someone is in therapy and says something which makes the psychiatrist think they are a danger to other people? While the content of the sessions is usually private is there not a duty to protect other people if they appear to be in imminent danger?

      Certainly in the UK they can inform the relevant people, usually the police, that they think someone is at risk because of something said in a private doctor-patient session. The question is how much risk Huntington's is. Her father murder

    • Exactly! (US MD here) If she wants to sue to change the law in a Tarasoff [wikipedia.org] "duty to notify" type of case then sure, sue away as it poses an interesting question. Does she have a right to know. If she is suing for $$$ (she is) then it fails 2 of the 4Ds of malpractice (if that is what she is going for):

      Duty: The daughter and the patient did not have a doctor patient relationship

      Dereliction: Standards of the time, and probably still would dictate the privacy of the actual patient (the dad) would win over the

  • Violent??? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by twistedcubic ( 577194 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @10:12PM (#59428784)

    I know 5 people with this disease, and none are violent. It's hard to be violent when you can barely control your movements. What a weird summary.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Child's complex (Score:5, Interesting)

    by GigaplexNZ ( 1233886 ) on Monday November 18, 2019 @10:34PM (#59428850)
    Just imagine the complex this child will have when they find out their mother sued doctors saying she would have aborted the pregnancy had they told her.
    • by Chaset ( 552418 )

      It wouldn't bother me if it were me. If it did happen, I wouldn't have been around to care. If I'm around to care, it obviously didn't happen. If the parent were being abusive (possibly constantly reminding the kid that he was an "accident"), THAT would be the problem, but not the fact that the parent didn't want to deal with a debilitating disease (and didn't want the kid to deal with it, either.) If the parents otherwise did a decent job raising me and possibly mentioned this fact, I don't see how it

      • This is worse than telling your kid that they're an "accident" - they still chose not to get an abortion. This is taking legal action (which is expensive, takes premeditation and isn't just something said in the heat of the moment) against a party for indirectly allowing their child to be born. There aren't many stronger ways of saying "I wish you hadn't been born".
    • Re:Child's complex (Score:5, Interesting)

      by blindseer ( 891256 ) <blindseer.earthlink@net> on Monday November 18, 2019 @10:51PM (#59428886)

      Just imagine the complex this child will have when they find out their mother sued doctors saying she would have aborted the pregnancy had they told her.

      Not only that but the mother didn't tell her sister about Huntington's in the family when she got pregnant, fearing that the sister might have aborted the pregnancy as well.

      I'm thinking that this will sink her case. She demanded that she should have been told but then also withheld this knowledge from her sister. If she thought this so important then she should have told her sister. Her finding out of her father's disease was a mistake, she should not have been told under current rules. I believe this to be a good policy as this should be something handled within the family. It was handled in the family by keeping quiet on this, both by the grandfather of the child in this lawsuit
      and by the mother not telling her sister.

      There's not just one child that will have this complex, there's now two. Both of them will have to ponder if they would have been born if their mothers were told about this disease in the family, and they will both have to ponder if they should get themselves tested for the disease.

    • Just imagine the complex this child will have when they find out their mother sued doctors saying she would have aborted the pregnancy had they told her.

      They'd probably wish they were aborted when Huntington's kicks in around 30.

    • You think this child will have to wait for this bomb to drop to develop that complex? I have a hunch the child will find out WAY before being able to even remotely understand the complex idea behind it, simply by how the mother will treat the child.

  • If it was my life, i'd rather live with 50/50 odds of early and horrible death than not live.

    However as a parent, i would obviously not want to bring a heavily crippled child into this world, for everyones sake.

    If I was the grand parent, I would not want my genetic legacy to die out above all, because then what was the point really? Even a shitty genetic legacy is still a legacy.

    Then again, gattaca. The human spirit overcomes much more than the average result of medical science might lead one to believe is

    • I too inherited the excessive white space gene.

    • You could do IVF and continue your legacy with an embryo that didn't get the gene
  • Why doesn't she sue God for giving her the gene in the first place? I hope she loses and the judge orders a big "Stupid" sticker placed on her forehead.
  • by Glasswire ( 302197 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @12:45AM (#59429142) Homepage

    ...for the harm done to her by exercising his right to withhold that information from her. Not the NHS. Or is she not interested in action against the guilty party, just the institution with more money?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      TFA doesn't mention money. There might be a nominal amount but in the goal here seems to be to set a precedent for how doctors should treat this kind of information. In other words it's altruistic, she wants to make sure other people in similar situations are informed.

      • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @08:53AM (#59429772)

        Careful what you wish for.

        What this essentially means is that the interests of a third party trump the doctor-patient confidentiality. I don't have to show examples why this is a BAD thing, do I?

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The British legal system tends to avoid that kind of very high level principal and instead look for more subtle, nuanced decisions that define when it is appropriate to inform a third party. Assuming they decide it is at all appropriate, that is.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

      Or is she not interested in action against the guilty party, just the institution with more money?

      If it were just about money it would make sense to sue the father. On the other hand suing an institution (especially a government one) is a way of creating awareness and pressing for policy change (even legal change).

      Nowhere does it say she is suing for a sum.

  • by Chrisq ( 894406 ) on Tuesday November 19, 2019 @04:52AM (#59429432)
    If this is allowed the doctors will be stuffed. If they are forbidden by someone to tell others about their condition and do so they have broken medical confidentiality. If the ruling says that they have to then they will be sued either way.
  • In my opinion this is a no-brainer. Succeeding generations have more rights naturally than preceding generations. She should have been warned. Go get the doctors.
    • Which throws open the doors for denial of health care based on genetics. "I'm sorry, you have Whatever Disease. It's incurable, and will cost succeeding generations far more in healthcare costs than you will generate in productivity during that time. Please report to the nearest Humane Termination Center within the next six months. If we are forced to dispatch a Health Compliance Team, your next-of-kin will be billed accordingly. Have a nice day."
  • Wow - US healthcare practices really are catching on. Frivolous law suits are a key tenet of American medicine.

  • Nothing stopped this woman from having medical tests done on herself prior to pregnancy to find things like this.

    People need to stop blaming others for their own shortcomings or bad decisions.

    Life can be difficult. Strap on your helmet and deal with it.

  • It is tragic. Maybe ...maybe a cure is found before she needs it.

  • When stuff like this happens, always lay the blame squarely at the feet of highly overpaid bureaucrats who have no medical knowledge whatsoever.

  • Health records are confidential for a reason.

    The doctors have no obligation to reveal anything about a patient to anyone else unless the patient is *unable* (not unwilling) to relay that information to his or her family. The fact that her dad may have had reasons he might have truly believed were valid for not letting her know are irrelevant. By not telling her, the bastard selfishly manipulated his daughter into doing something other than what she may have chosen to do if she had known, just to appea

  • The article and many comments are claiming there is a great moral conflict here: confidentiality of patient records vs. a potential parent's right to know of possible risks for serious problems for their child. There is really no dilemma since there is a very easy solution. People can get their own genetic profiles done BEFORE they make the decision to have a baby. They can be done for under $100 now and would reveal all sorts of potential risks, including the Huntington's gene. There is no need to bre
  • Put a flag in every medical history saying "genetic tests warranted". This flag could go up because signs of a genetic disease have been spotted, or because someone in the immediate family has been conclusively shown to suffer from the condition. The most important bit that decouples this from privacy issues is that the patient is not told why they are being recommended to take a genetic test, nor what is being specifically sought. It could be something as innocent as "you appear to carry sickle-cell trait,

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