Birmingham Post

Mentally ill pregnant woman ‘can decide’ on abortion

- Brian Farmer

A PREGNANT woman detained in Birmingham under the terms of mental health legislatio­n is capable of deciding whether to have an abortion even though doctors say such a move would not be in her best interests, a judge has ruled.

Judge Carolyn Hilder has questioned assessment­s made by specialist­s who concluded that the woman did not have the mental capacity to consent to a terminatio­n of her pregnancy. The judge said clinicians may not agree with the woman’s reasons for seeking a terminatio­n but said their disagreeme­nt did not justify a conclusion that her decision-making was “incapacito­us”.

She outlined detail of her decision in a written ruling published online after analysing evidence at a hearing in the Court of Protection, where issues relating to people who may not have the mental capacity to take decisions for themselves are heard.

The judge said the woman – who is in her 30s, more than 20 weeks pregnant and has been diagnosed as having bipolar affective disorder – could not be named in media reports of the case.

The woman is in the care of Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Trust and Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Trust. Lawyers representi­ng the two trusts said all clinicians took the view that the woman “lacks capacity to make a decision about terminatio­n” because the “depressive aspects of her bipolar disorder” rendered her “unable to use and weigh relevant aspects of the decision”.

But John McKendrick QC, who represente­d the woman, said there was “no evidence sufficient to rebut the statutory presumptio­n of capacity”.

Judge Hilder ruled in the woman’s favour. The judge said it was “very far from clear” that the woman was made aware that she was being assessed when she met two specialist­s. She said she had made a declaratio­n that the woman had the “capacity to consent to a terminatio­n of her pregnancy”.

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