Legal assessment of the duties to “take care of health” of the person and the state according to Lithuanian legislation
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Abstract
							The paper analyzes the peculiarities of the duties to “take case of  health” in respect of the person and the state in the legal acts of  Lithuania. The duties of the person apply both in respect of the person  as the resident of Lithuania and in respect of the person as the  patient. As the patient, the person, according to the Law on the rights  of patients and compensation for the damage to their health and the  internal regulations of health care institutions, is obliged to take  care of own health. As the resident of the Republic of Lithuania, the  person according to the Law on the health system has to fulfill the duty  to take care not only of his/her own, but also of the health of the  parents and under age children. The conclusion is made that the  requirement for the person who has the legal status of the person is  more important, because in case of the failure to fulfill it, certain  legal consequences may arise. Meanwhile, the duty of the resident to  take care of own health is evaluated as declarative. The general  peculiarity that complicates the implementation of the duty “to take  care of own health”, and at the same time, the legal assessment, is the  lack of clarity and wideness of the concept of “health”. This also  applies with the aim of assessing the possibilities of the  implementation of the resident’s duties to take care of the health of  “own under age children” and “own parents.” Nevertheless, the analysis  of provisions of the Civil Code of the Republic of Lithuania and other  legal acts that provide the duty of the parents to maintain their under  age children and adequately, the duty of adult children to maintain  parents who are in need of the support (fulfilling the health care needs  in both cases) allows to claim that both the duty of the parents and  the duty of the children to take care of each other’s health under the  Law on the health system of the Republic of Lithuania, are not only  declarative norms.
The second part of the paper is aimed at analysis of the provision “the state shall take care of people‘s health” of the Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania. It has been established that the crucial presumption of the duty – the implementation of the rights to health care established under international human rights documents (that Lithuania adhered to or ratified). It has been revealed that this duty under the constitutional doctrine of Lithuania is treated more as the function of the state, the public interest, and not the individual right to achieve certain health care services guaranteed by the Constitution. In consideration of the constitutional doctrine, it has to be recognized that the implementation of this duty cannot be separated from the state‘s social and economic situation, the needs and possibilities of the society and the state, and other factors. However, it can be claimed that in certain cases it is possible to argue whether the state which has established a certain requirement really does not infringe the rights of the specific patient/ resident in the field of health care.
					The second part of the paper is aimed at analysis of the provision “the state shall take care of people‘s health” of the Constitution of the Republic of Lithuania. It has been established that the crucial presumption of the duty – the implementation of the rights to health care established under international human rights documents (that Lithuania adhered to or ratified). It has been revealed that this duty under the constitutional doctrine of Lithuania is treated more as the function of the state, the public interest, and not the individual right to achieve certain health care services guaranteed by the Constitution. In consideration of the constitutional doctrine, it has to be recognized that the implementation of this duty cannot be separated from the state‘s social and economic situation, the needs and possibilities of the society and the state, and other factors. However, it can be claimed that in certain cases it is possible to argue whether the state which has established a certain requirement really does not infringe the rights of the specific patient/ resident in the field of health care.
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