Injuries to unborn children: extracts from the report of the Law Commission

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Abstract

The Scottish Law Commission has issued a long report, from which the authors are printing the paragraphs discussing the medical background and the summary of recommendations. As will be evident on reading the paragraphs on the medical background to injuries to the unborn child, events are moving very rapidly, particularly in the study of congenital defects and the effects of drugs but the problems of proof present great difficulty. Other causes of injury to the unborn child are better known to the general public: for example, those following the illness, infection and disease of the mother during pregnancy, injury caused in attempted termination of pregnancy and the risks resulting from the mother's condition. The summary of the recommendations sets out very clearly the legal position of the unborn child, as the Law Commission sees it, arising from injury before birth, the final conclusion being that 'legislation is desirable'.

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Cooke, S., Bicknell, C., & Diamond, A. L. (1975). Injuries to unborn children: extracts from the report of the Law Commission. Journal of Medical Ethics, 1(3), 111–115. https://doi.org/10.1136/jme.1.3.111

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