Saturday 24 November 2007

Example 3

A man is arrested for sexual abusing children, or ay other crime. The man is arrested and then questioned at which time he admits the crime. The only evidence the police have is the mans confession. The man is then charged and brought before the courts. At this point it is discovered that the man had not been read his rights after being arrested and had not been told he was under caution. He had also been lead to believe that what he had said before being arrested would ‘go no further’. Because his rights were breached, what he had said in the past could not be used as evidence, he then walks free.A patient. tells a doctor/nurse something under the impression that nobody else will know and unaware of the fact that the data would be used by others, such as for insurance or to determine if the idividual broke the law. The patient then finds out data latter date about this and the doctor then simply tells the patient this is the case and the patient can do nothing to stop it. If that means the patients would not have disclosed data or be examined, then that is tough luck, the patient has fewer rights than the criminal. If the patient happened to be a victim of the above crime and had sought help due to this, then that raises one big question. Why is it the patient has less rights? Their attacker walks free for not being told the truth, the patient simply has this back dated to allow data to be shared and accessed.I for one find that imoral, yet it gets done almost every day in the health profession.

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