-
Photo: what is the strange ‘hair ice’ phenomenon seen in France recently?
Extremely rare formation is occurring in eastern woodlands
-
Macron confirms what he wants to say to Trump when he visits US next week
Ukraine, EU and US relations and geopolitical situation are unsurprisingly key topics
-
More trains and routes linking UK to France (and other European countries) expected under new agreement
British rail regulators hope for new international lines on UK-France high-speed route
French hospital ordered to pay Jehovah’s Witness over transfusion
A French court has ruled a hospital must compensate a Jehovah’s Witness after staff administered a blood transfusion which the patient had explicitly refused

A Jehovah’s Witness has won a court case against a hospital that gave her a blood transfusion against her wishes.
The CHU university hospital in Bordeaux must pay €4,000 to her following the procedure which took place in 2016.
The woman had asked for €30,000.
The patient was hospitalised for a gallbladder removal, but complications resulted in life-threatening bleeding and the medical staff administered two blood transfusions, even though she had previously said that this went against her religious convictions.
The Administrative Court of Appeal found no wrongdoing at this stage, as “respecting the patient’s wishes would have put her life in danger, and as she was unconscious, she was not able to reiterate her refusal in a reasonable timeframe”.
However, a third transfusion took place after the patient regained consciousness and repeated her refusal when staff explained the consequences, which the court ruled contravened Article L1111-4 of the Public Health Code
Related articles
French health site Doctolib to ban unregulated wellbeing practitioners
Five things they don’t tell you about… French attitudes to healthcare
What can I do if I receive substandard dental treatment in France