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El. knyga: Causing Psychiatric and Emotional Harm: Reshaping the Boundaries of Legal Liability

  • Formatas: 213 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Dec-2008
  • Leidėjas: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781847314789
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 213 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Dec-2008
  • Leidėjas: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781847314789
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Though mental harm can be profoundly disabling, the law imposes strict limits on who can recover damages for it. In the absence of physical injury, compensation is not normally available for negligently-caused mental suffering, however severe, unless it constitutes a 'recognizable psychiatric illness.' Claimants whose mental trauma stems from injury caused to someone else are subject to arbitrary restrictive liability rules that dispense with established legal principles and cannot be reconciled with scientific advances. It is argued that the reluctance to provide redress reflects an enduring suspicion of intangible injury and undue fear of proliferating claims. The scale and legal ramifications of the Hillsborough disaster (the Sheffield, England football stadium stampede), the emergence of claims arising from work-related stress, and other new categories of claims based mainly on prior relationships between the parties, have all added to a 'floodgates fear' that has intensified due to popular perceptions of a 'compensation culture.' This innovative book traces the history of civil liability for mental harm up to the present day. It contrasts the limited scope for liability under English law with developments in several other jurisdictions. It argues that statutory reform is needed to achieve greater legal coherence, and to provide a remedy that tracks the impact and severity of harm and is not confined to psychiatric disorders. A new legal framework is offered, rooted in reasonable foreseeability of severe mental or emotional harm. To allay concerns about proliferating claims, modifications to the compensatory regime for personal injury are proposed.

Recenzijos

...this latest work by Harvey Teff is a worthy addition to the list...the earlier chapters contain a valuable discussion of many aspects of English psychiatric injury law...A final feature of this fascinating book is the new insights that Teff gives us on the "floodgates fear". Peter Handford, Winthrop Professor of Law, University of Western Australia Tort Law Review 2009, 17 While this book contains a thorough examination of the leading cases and scholarship, what really sets the book apart from the rest is not its detail, but its reformist aim, bolstered by an impressive analysis of developments in a range of other common law jurisdictions including Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the USA. Causing Psychiatric and Emotional Harm is an impressive book. Its size is surprisingly deceptive as Teff manages to condense a wide breadth of scholarly research into a mere 190 pages of text. It is especially hoped that Causing Psychiatric and Emotional Harm might be considered, discussed and cited by members of the judiciary. Carol Forrest Legal Studies Volume 30, Number 4, 2010

Acknowledgements iii
Table of Statutes
xxi
Psychiatric Harm, Emotional Suffering and Legal Redress
1(36)
Categorising Personal Harm
1(9)
Introduction
1(3)
Mental and Emotional Harm
4(1)
Some Problems of Classification
5(1)
Medical
5(2)
Legal
7(3)
Underlying Hostility: Disparaging Intangible Harm and its Redress
10(10)
Mind and Body
10(2)
The Stigmatisation of Mental Illness
12(6)
The `Blame and Claim' Culture
18(2)
Embracing Liability for Mental and Emotional Harm
20(11)
Some Modern Statutory Developments
20(2)
The Special Case of Psychiatric Illness Caused by Stress at Work
22(4)
The Scope for Liability at Common Law
26(1)
Mental Distress resulting from Breach of Contract
26(2)
Damages in Tort for Mental Distress
28(3)
Some Criminal Law Comparisons
31(2)
Caveat and Conclusion
33(4)
The Development of Redress for Emotional Harm and Nervous Shock
37(22)
`Harm' at Common Law
37(6)
Minimum Actionable Harm at Common Law
37(3)
Early Legal Views on Intangible Harm
40(1)
The Victorian Era and `Railway Spine'
41(2)
Development of Liability for `Mental And Nervous Shock': The `First Hundred Years'
43(11)
Recoverable Harm: a `recognisable psychiatric illness'
52(2)
An Overview of the Period
54(5)
Conclusion
56(3)
Contemporary Provision for `Accident-Based' Psychiatric Illness
59(38)
McLoughlin v O'Brian: Policy or Principle?
59(6)
The 1990s: From Alcock to Page to White---`Thus Far and No Further'?
65(9)
Alcock v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police
66(1)
Alcock on Appeal
67(1)
Proximity of Relationship
68(1)
The `Immediate' Aftermath
69(1)
The Mode of Communication
69(1)
Sudden and Gradual Assaults on the Nervous System
70(4)
Page v Smith and White v Chief Constable Of South Yorkshire: The `Patchwork Quilt' Embedded
74(1)
Primary/Secondary/Both/Neither?
75(2)
The Mixed Messages of Page v Smith
77(6)
Confused Legal Doctrine
77(5)
The Unfulfilled Promise of `Law Marching with Medicine'
82(1)
Hillsborough Revisited
83(14)
A Misconceived Public Relations Exercise in the Name of Distributive Justice?
91(2)
White v Chief Constable of South Yorkshire: Weary Resignation?
93(4)
Liability for Psychiatric Harm `Beyond the Mainstream'
97(44)
Introduction
97(2)
Negligent Provision of Services
99(4)
Communicating Bad News
103(10)
Negligent Communication of Information
103(6)
Fear for the Future
109(4)
Medical Negligence: The Declining Significance of the `Sudden Shock' of a `Horrifying Event'
113(9)
Introduction
113(2)
Lord Ackner's Conception of Shock
115(1)
The Event
115(1)
Suddenness
116(1)
Horror Violently Agitating the Mind
117(1)
Claims resulting from Medical Negligence
117(5)
Negligence Causing Psychological Detriment
122(3)
The Doctrinal Basis for Exceptions to the Special Rule Structure
125(5)
Assumption of Responsibility'
126(2)
A Reversion to First Principles
128(2)
An Australian Exemplar: Tame v New South Wales; Annetts v Australian Stations Pty Ltd
130(7)
Legislative Developments
135(2)
Conclusions
137(4)
Policy Concerns
141(30)
Some Common Policy Justifications for Special Controls
141(14)
Diagnostic Uncertainty
143(2)
Litigation and Rehabilitation
145(3)
Liability Disproportionate to Culpability
148(1)
The Potential for Proliferating Claims
149(1)
The Potency of the `Floodgates Fear'
149(2)
Disincentives to Claiming
151(2)
The Claims-handling Process
153(2)
The Frequency of Claims
155(11)
Personal Injury Claims in General
155(3)
The Incidence of Claims for Psychiatric Harm
158(3)
The Impact of Employees' Claims for Stress-Induced Psychiatric Illness
161(4)
Conclusion on the Floodgates Fear as regards Psychiatric Harm
165(1)
Broader Policy Considerations
166(5)
Chilling Effects: The `Perils' of a Risk-Averse Society
166(3)
Risk Aversion and Mental Harm
169(2)
A Proposal For Reform
171(20)
A New Test for Remediable Suffering
171(14)
The Substantive Basis of Liability
171(6)
The Case for a Monetary Threshold
177(2)
Is a Monetary Threshold a Step Too Far?
179(4)
Conclusion
183(2)
The Proposed Framework in Outline
185(1)
Remaining Barriers to Reform
186(5)
A Legally Undervalued Core Value
186(2)
Lingering Doubts Specific to the English Law Context
188(1)
Concluding Remarks
189(2)
Bibliography 191(10)
Index 201
Harvey Teff is Emeritus Professor of Law at Durham University. Formerly Head of the Durham Law Department, he has been a Visiting Professor at the University of Iowa. His previous books include Thalidomide - the Legal Aftermath (with CR Munro, 1976) and Reasonable Care - Legal Perspectives on the Doctor-Patient Relationship (1994). He has written extensively on liability for psychiatric harm and medical negligence.