Veteran etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Veteran etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

28 Eylül 2016 Çarşamba

Widow of Falklands war veteran wins legal battle to save frozen embryos

The widow of a Falklands war veteran has won a high court declaration giving her a “last chance” to have her late husband’s child.


Samantha Jefferies, 42, from East Sussex, was forced to go to court after the shock discovery that the 10-year period for storing the frozen embryos the couple had created had been inexplicably amended to two years and had since expired.


Jefferies and her husband, Clive, had been undergoing fertility treatment when he died suddenly, aged 51, of a brain haemorrhage.


A judge has now declared that the amendment to the storage period was not valid and the embryos, instead of being allowed to perish, can still lawfully be stored and used.


The declaration was made by Sir James Munby, president of the family division of the high court, who said he would give his reasons later in writing.


Jefferies said the judge’s decision was “overwhelmingly fantastic – just brilliant, amazing”.


Jefferies, an occupational therapist, said she did not have a plan for using the embryos soon but added: “I would love to be a mum.”


She thanked the judge for Googling the history of her husband, who served in the Royal Army Medical Corps and was onboard the transport ship Sir Galahad when it was bombed in the Falklands in 1982, killing 48 men.


She told the court her husband was “a wonderful man”, adding: “I want my husband’s child.”


The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority supported her application on the grounds that the amendment to the MT form – used to record consent for embryo storage – had not been signed by Clive Jefferies.


BMI Healthcare Ltd, which runs the Sussex Downs Fertility Centre where the couple received treatment, also supported her and funded her legal costs.


The judge said BMI seemed to have acted “with sensitivity and compassion”.


Jefferies paid tribute to all those who had supported her “commonsense” application and said: “It has given me faith in the law.”


In court, Jenni Richards QC told the judge: “Samantha has brought this case because the embryos she is seeking to preserve represent her last chance of having the child of her husband they had both so dearly wanted.”


Three embryos were created from Jefferies’ eggs and her late husband’s sperm, with consent for them to be stored for 10 years from August 11 2013. Her husband also consented to their posthumous use.


The couple met in 1999 and married in December 2006 and always wanted to have children, the court heard.


After trying naturally for many years, they were referred in 2013 for NHS-funded IVF treatment, said Richards.


A number of amendments were made to Clive Jefferies’ consent form, including one specifying a reduction in the storage period from 10 years to two.


Most of the amendments were countersigned by Clive Jefferies, but the change to the storage period was not, said Richards.


Jefferies did not know who made the amendment and it came as a shock when she discovered it.


Richards said it was likely the amendment was made to reflect the clinic’s policy at the time, which was to only offer storage for the period for which the NHS would provide funding.


There was evidence that the clinic had asked couples to amend their forms to two years if they had chosen a longer period of storage.


Granting Jefferies a declaration that storage and use was lawful until August 11 2023, the judge said: “I am just so sorry that people like you should have no idea that this can end up in court because of mistakes made by other people who should have known better.”



Widow of Falklands war veteran wins legal battle to save frozen embryos

16 Ocak 2014 Perşembe

How One City Ended Continual Veteran Homelessness

Final month Phoenix completed some thing no community has ever carried out before: it brought the amount of chronically homeless veterans down to zero.


The city’s work was the topic of a White Property blog post and is featured these days in The New York Times.


The accomplishment, according to the Times, is the end result of an strategy recognized as Housing Initial. This evidence-primarily based practice focuses on supplying steady housing to the homeless not as a reward for recovery from addiction, for example, but as basic commencing point. Then further solutions are provided to address the variables that drive persistent homelessness, such as psychological or physical illness.


Related Story: VA Awards $ 60 Million To Aid Homeless Vets


In Phoenix, the place rents are more reasonably priced and there is a lot more area to create, placing veterans in housing or constructing new developments is an less difficult process than in a denser cities.


In 2011, in accordance to the Times, there were 222 chronically homeless veterans in Phoenix, “a vulnerable, difficult-to-reach population of primarily middle-age males, nearly all battling some kind of physical or mental ailment along with substance abuse.” Now people veterans are living in temporary or long term housing.


It is a victory for a system coordinated by the Departments of Housing and Urban Growth and Veterans Affairs, which aims to finish veteran homelessness by 2015. Since 2010, the Times notes, far more than $ 900 million housing vouchers have been awarded to veterans.


Lest this look like a short-term victory, the Instances factors out that 94 percent of veterans surveyed in the city remained in everlasting housing soon after one 12 months compared to a nationwide average of 85 %.


That’s a excellent signal, and perhaps it implies that cities are presently adapting lessons realized in Phoenix.


In the meantime, the city’s efforts seem to be to be creating a huge variation in the lives of veterans. “If I had to do this on my own,” mentioned a single veteran, “I’d never ever have created it here.”


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How One City Ended Continual Veteran Homelessness