Amendment 55

Part of Mental Health Bill [HL] - Committee (3rd Day) – in the House of Lords at 6:45 pm on 22 January 2025.

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Photo of Lord Scriven Lord Scriven Liberal Democrat Lords Spokesperson (Health) 6:45, 22 January 2025

It is useful, but it is therefore contradictory to what the Minister has just said. If the checklist is statutory and it is legally binding that it has to be followed, how would a young person in that checklist having a view about their care be different from an advance directive? That is the issue. The Minister said the other alternative is that a person under 18 or 16 can make a decision in relation to the medical checklist, and she has just said that the decisions are legally binding. Alternatively, is it that carrying out the process is legally statutorily binding but the views of somebody who is 16 on that list are not?

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