Families issue legal claims in High Court against Health Secretary over care home and hospital COVID-19 deaths

By Law News
Families whose loved ones died in care homes and hospitals in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic have issued legal claims in the High Court against the Health Secretary, individual care homes and Hospital Trusts
Represented by law firm Leigh Day, the families have filed claims for damages for loss of life, personal injuries, pain and suffering, anxiety, distress, and feelings of injustice.
The families argue the loss of their loved ones was a breach of Articles 2, 8 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
They are bringing their claims under section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 – Acts of Public Bodies.
The families say breaches of human rights occurred through the State’s failure to comply with its obligations to ?
- protect the right to life,
- respect the right to private and family life
- protect the right not to be discriminated against
The families will argue the State failed to protect their rights through failures to publish procedures, appropriate guidance, policies and/ or rules to be applied by operators of residential and/ or nursing care homes, healthcare settings and hospitals.
The cases concern deaths in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when patients infected with COVID-19 were being transferred from hospitals into care homes.
The claims are being brought in light of the Gardner judgment which concluded that the Department of Health March Discharge Policy and the April Admissions Guidance “simply failed to take into account the highly relevant consideration of the risk to elderly and vulnerable residents from asymptomatic transmission”. The government reacted slowly and fell behind the growing consensus on asymptomatic transmission of COVID-19.
The Gardner Judgment found that the Government polices were irrational in failing to advise that where an asymptomatic patient was admitted to a care home, they should be kept apart from other residents for 14 days and there were many deaths as a result of the failure to take account of the growing appreciation that asymptomatic transmission was a real possibility.
Leigh Day partner Emma Jones and associate solicitor Beatrice Morgan represent families including:?















