Boards have no
home birth obligations
Mary Carolan
In a decision appearing
to bring to a close the long-running legal controversy over home
birth services, the Supreme Court has unanimously ruled there
is no statutory obligation on health boards to provide home
birth services.
While Section 62
of the Health Act 1970 required health boards to make available
appropriate medical, surgical and midwifery services, that obligation
would be fully complied with by providing those services within
the confines of a hospital, the court found.
In an eight-page
judgment, the five judge court yesterday dismissed appeals by
four women against the refusal by the South West Area Health Board
and the East Coast Area Health Board to provide them directly
or indirectly with home birth services.
The four women had
appealed against a High Court judgment of September 2002 which
found that Section 62 of the Health Act 1970 did not confer on
the
women a right to have a midwife provided for them in order to
enable them to give birth in their homes.
Since their proceedings
were initiated against the South Western Area Health Board and
the East Coast Area Health Board, all four women have had private
home births. They are Ms Sarah Clarke, Ballyvass, Castledermot,
Co Kildare; Ms Melissa Lockhart, Craddockstown Road, Naas, Co
Kildare; Ms Anne Brannick, Quill Road, Kilmacanogue, Co Wicklow
and Ms Caroline O'Brien, Ballinclea, Glen of Imaal, Co Wicklow.
The women had claimed
that the Boards' failure to provide home birth services to them,
whether directly or through defraying all or part of the costs
of securing the services of an independent domiciliary midwife,
breached the Board's obligations under Section 62.
Giving the Supreme
Court decision yesterday, Mr Justice Geoghegan said the heart
of the proceedings lay in the interpretation of Section 62.
Section 62.1 provided
for a health board "to make available without charge medical,
surgical and midwifery services for attendance to the health,
in respect of motherhood, of women". Section 62.2 provided
that a woman entitled to receive services under the section "may
choose to receive them from any registered medical practitioner
who has entered into an agreement
with the health board for the provision of those services and
who is willing to accept her as a patient.
Section 62.3 stated:
"When a woman avails herself of services under this section
for a confinement taking place otherwise than in a hospital or
maternity home, the health board shall provide without charge
obstetrical
requisites to such extent as may be specified by regulations made
by the Minister." Mr Justice Geoghegan said Dr Michael Forde
SC, for the women,
while conceding there was no express provision in Section 62 compelling
a health board to provide for home births, had contended such
an obligation
must be read into the section by implication.
The judge said counsel
relied heavily on the historical context in which Section 62 came
into existence, replacing Section 16 of the 1953 Health Act.
Counsel had argued that in 1953 it would have been unthinkable
that a provision for free maternity services would not have involved
the private home as much as the hospital.
Mr Justice Geoghegan
said he did not believe it would be legitimate for the court to
enter into speculation regarding the context of Section 62. The
question did not arise because new, albeit similar, provisions
were enacted by the Oireachtas in the Health Act 1970 and it was
the construction of Section 62 of the 1970 Act which the court
was engaged in.
The furthest that
could be said in favour of Dr Forde's interpretation of Section
62 was that in Section 62.3 it would seem the Oireachtas clearly
had in mind the possibility at least that the midwifery services
provided by a health board, might include home midwifery services.
However, that was
"a far remove from a national statutory obligation on a health
board to provide such services". The judge said he could
find nothing in Section 62 to justify interpreting it as creating
such an obligation.
Section 62.3 simply
dealt with what is to happen if there were in fact home midwifery
services provided and an eligible woman availed of those services.
It had no relevance whatsoever to whether there was an obligation
to provide home midwifery services.
The judge also dismissed
a claim by Ms Brannick that it was discriminatory for the ECAHB
not to provide home midwifery services of a kind which other health
boards did provide. He said he could find no justification for
that
argument.
© The
Irish Times
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