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F E AT URE C O N S E N T


MY CHILD, MY CHOICE


Allan Gaw recounts the famous Gillick case and events leading up to a landmark decision on medical consent in children


T


O SAY that Mrs Gillick was angry is an understatement. She felt her rights as a parent had been undermined by a set of government guidelines issued to doctors, and she was furious. Her outrage was further fuelled by her belief that this guidance was tantamount to condoning and even encouraging underage sex. Victoria Gillick, a mother of four daughters


under 16 at the time, took legal action. What happened next would fundamentally change the way we view and assess the competence of children to make treatment decisions. Today, more than 30 years later, when we speak of consent in children and young people, we still talk of ‘Gillick competence’, but what is the story behind that phrase?


DWINDLING RIGHTS In December 1980, the Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS) issued a circular giving guidance on family planning services for young people, which stated, or implied, that at least in certain cases which were described as ‘exceptional,’ a doctor could lawfully prescribe contraception for a girl under age 16 without her parents’ consent. Gillick regarded this stance as illegal and in March 1981 she objected in the strongest terms to her local area health authority (AHA) — West Norfolk and Wisbech — and sought their assurance that her children would not be given advice or prescribed contraceptives without her knowledge or consent. She received no such assurance and in August 1982 she took both the AHA and the DHSS to court.


The case went initially to the High Court in 1984 where


Mr Justice Woolf, who presided, turned down Gillick’s claim and dismissed the action. He noted: “...whether or not a child is capable of giving the necessary consent will depend on the child’s maturity and understanding and the nature of the consent required. The child must be capable of making a reasonable assessment of the advantages and disadvantages of the treatment proposed, so the consent, if given, can be properly and fairly described as true consent.” However, Gillick appealed against the ruling and the


12 / MDDUS INSIGHT / Q1 2018


following year was successful in having this decision overturned. Against that decision, the DHSS appealed to the House of Lords in October 1985 and the case was examined by the Law Lords — Scarman, Fraser and Bridge. Gillick’s case was centred on her loss of parental rights and the legality of the DHSS’s position, and the judges reviewed these in turn. The Law Lords examined the issue of ‘parental rights’ and concluded that these only really exist for the benefit of the child and effectively dwindle as the child grows in age and maturity. Lord Scarman stated that this “parental right yields to the child’s right” when she becomes sufficiently mature to make autonomous decisions. The judges also firmly concluded that any doctor who


exercised clinical judgement in offering contraceptive advice to a girl under 16 without her parent’s consent would not be guilty of an offence. With these rulings the decision of the Court of Appeal, which had overturned the original ruling, was itself quashed, and Gillick had finally lost.


SUFFICIENT UNDERSTANDING This case will be remembered, however, not for what it said about the legality of offering contraceptive advice to minors, but for its more general rulings on child consent. The case afforded the judges the opportunity to address the issue of competence in those under 16 more generally, and in so doing to create the concept of Gillick competence. Lord Scarman ruled: “I would hold that as a matter


of law the parental right to determine whether or not their minor child below the age of 16 will have medical treatment terminates if and when the child achieves a sufficient understanding and intelligence to enable him or her to understand fully what is proposed.” Thus, Gillick competence allows a child under age 16 to consent to or refuse medical treatment, and it is up to a doctor to decide whether a child has the maturity and intelligence to fully understand the nature of the treatment, the options, the risks involved and the benefits. Importantly, no lower age limit was defined in the ruling for the potentially competent child. The nature of that “sufficient understanding and intelligence” has of course been much debated and in the


Photographs: Press Association


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