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Verdict Reached In Landmark Mental Health Employment Case
Cheltenham Borough Council has today lost its case to sue former employee Christine Laird for ÷£1million for not disclosing her past experience of depression. Leading mental health charity Mind says the landmark ruling serves as an important reminder to employers about the importance of providing adequate support to people with mental health problems in the workplace.
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RCP President Responds To Publication Of NHS Alcohol Statistics Compendium, UK
Responding to the figures contained in Statistics on Alcohol: England 2009, Professor Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of Physicians said:
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Cancer Centers Of North Carolina Offers HDR Brachytherapy For Treatment Of Cancerous Tumors
Cancer Centers of North Carolina, an affiliate of US Oncology, Inc., continues to offer cutting-edge treatment options to its patients through the addition of High Dose Rate (HDR) brachytherapy. This latest advance in brachytherapy allows physicians to deliver precise radiation treatment to a patient"s cancerous tumor and is rapidly becoming the treatment of choice for certain types of cancer.
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MPS Wins Members' Right To Legal Representation In Hospital Disciplinary Hearings

The Medical Protection Society (MPS) welcomes the Court of Appeal decision that NHS hospital doctors have the right to legal representation at disciplinary hearings, where serious charges are raised. The ruling gives doctors a contractual right to legal representation by a lawyer instructed by a medical defence organisation (MDO). Dr Priya Singh, Medical Director at MPS, speaking about the decisions says, "This is a landmark ruling, confirming that current NHS Trust disciplinary procedures do confer a contractual right for doctors to be legally represented by their MDO. Clearly, this reinforces the importance for all NHS doctors to ensure that they have membership of an MDO which is necessary to secure the contractual rights referred to in today"s judgment" The judgment also indicates that where NHS hospital doctors face allegations so serious that, if found proven; they would be effectively barred from practising, Article 6 of the Human Rights Act, namely the right to a fair trail, is engaged. This includes the right to legal representation. Whilst it recognises that employers may face difficulty in drawing the line between cases where Article 6 is and is not engaged, it nonetheless makes it unlawful to refuse legal representation in a case which does engage Article 6. Dr Priya Singh adds: "Employers would now be well advised to give all requests for legal representation fair and careful consideration, and to agree." Medical Protection Society


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