UK appeal court rulings cause upheaval in UK child Welfare and medical groups.LONDON -- A ruling by the United Kingdom Court of Appeal, that reversed the convictions of two mothers accused of murdering their children, has caused considerable disturbance in the medical profession, and for child welfare authorities. The convictions of the two mothers were obtained largely on expert testimony Testimony about a scientific, technical, or professional issue given by a person qualified to testify because of familiarity with the subject or special training in the field. that the judges considered "unsafe." * The United Kingdom's Attorney General, Lord Goldsmith ordered a review of almost 300 criminal cases where mothers had been jailed on the strength of evidence presented by a single scientific expert, usually a paediatrician. * Local authorities were ordered to examine thousands of civil cases where parents had been forced to give up their children for adoption after being accused of abuse on the testimony of paediatricians. * The Legal Services Commission The Legal Services Commission (LSC) is an executive non-departmental public body that is responsible for the operational administration of legal aid in England and Wales. It is sponsored by the Ministry of Justice and its work is overseen by an independent board of commissioners. will fund legal action by parents, whose children were removed because of the abuse accusations by paediatricians. * The General Medical Council, which regulates the profession, is investigating the fitness of Professor Sir Roy Meadow Professor Sir Samuel Roy Meadow (born 1933) is a former British paediatrician notorious for his 1977 academic paper on Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy (MSbP), in which he claimed that parents fabricate their child's illness. , whose expert testimony and competence as an expert were found to be "unsafe" by the Appeal Court. (Meadow is now retired). * The GMC GMC See: Guaranteed Mortgage Certificate is being accused of failure to act on earlier complaints about Professor Meadow and complaints that he was practicing outside his area of competence. Meadow has been a controversial figure among experts on Sudden Infant Death Syndrome sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) or crib death, sudden, unexpected, and unexplained death of an apparently healthy infant under one year of age (usually between two weeks and eight months old). . He propounded "Meadow's Law Meadow's Law was a precept much in use until recently in the field of child protection, specifically by those investigating cases of multiple cot or crib death — SIDS — within a single family. " which states that: one child death is a tragedy, two suspicious and three murder. The court found this approach to be "fundamentally flawed flaw 1 n. 1. An imperfection, often concealed, that impairs soundness: a flaw in the crystal that caused it to shatter. See Synonyms at blemish. 2. ". Meadow has been challenged by other experts who maintain that multiple deaths of children happen far more often than Meadow claims. In 2003 a case of a mother accused of murdering her children was quashed and recently another woman convicted of child murder has been given leave to appeal. In both of these cases Meadow provided the expert testimony. |
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