Psychiatric Injury Flashcards

1
Q

What is a psychiatric injury

A

Severe, long-term mental injury which is more than shock or grief

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2
Q

What do primary victims and secondary victims have to prove

A

Primary - negligence on the part of D
Secondary - there was an accident / event caused by negligence
Which caused mental injury
Claimant passes Alcock criteria
A person of reasonable fortitude also would have suffered the same injury

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3
Q

Mental injury info

A

Long term
More than mere shock or grief - could prevent D from working
Must be sudden

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4
Q

Alcock criteria

A
  1. C had close ties of love and affection to victim (Bourhill v Young vs McLoughlin v O’Brien)
    - close type of relationship (Hambrook v Stokes - family member)
    - close in fact
  2. Claimant suffered mental injured at the scene of the accident or immediate aftermath. 8 hours was too long in Alcock, but 2 hours was acceptable in Mcloughlin
  3. Shock suffered through unaided senses - not tv or radio
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5
Q

Primary vs secondary victims

A

Primary victims were involved in accident and suffered either physical / mental injuries or both
Secondary victims were not involved but suffered mental injury due to what they saw at the scene of the accident
Page v Smith

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6
Q

Rescuers

A

Chadwick v British Rail - members of the public rescuing can claim as primary victims
Hale v London Underground - professional rescuers who put themselves at risk are more likely to succeed as primary victims
White v CCSY - professionals who don’t put themselves at risk are unlikely to succeed

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7
Q

Bystanders

A

McFarlane v E E Caledonia - unable to claim unless they satisfy Alcock criteria

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8
Q

Property owners

A

Attia v British Gas - claimed nervous shock after seeing her house negligently burned down

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9
Q

Near missers

A

Regarded as primary victims, can claim for mental or physical injury if they can prove negligence

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10
Q

Gradual shock

A

Sion v Hampstead Health Authority - watching sons health decline for 14 days was not a sudden horrifying event
North Glamorgan NHS Trust v Walters - uninterrupted series of events over 36 hours

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