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Acts

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The abuse the patients suffered at Winterbourne view was inhuman. However, this could have been prevented if the carers at the hospital were aware of the several anti-discriminatory acts put in place to help stop abuse, such as the abuse shown at Winterbourne View.
The Human Rights Act is one of the main laws protecting your human rights in the UK. It contains a list of 16 rights, also known as ‘articles’ which belong to all people in the UK, and it outlines several ways that these rights should be protected.
These rights are drawn from the European Convention on Human Rights, which were developed by the UK and others in aftermath of World War II. Only public authorities or bodies exercising public functions have legal duties under the Human Rights Act. This includes:
• The police
• NHS organizations and staff
• Local authorities and their egoless
• NHS private nursing and care home arranged for out of public funds
• Prison staff
• Courts and tribunals, including mental health tribunals
• Government departments and their employees

This includes Winterbourne View and the patients and staff.
The Human Rights Act protects you from
• Torture (mental, physical)
• Inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
However, the patients at Winterbourne view were not protected by the Human Rights Act because they were tortured both mentally and physically by their “carers”. Also the treatment they received was inhuman and degrading and the so called punishment they received was too extreme. The Human Rights Act was not adopted by the staff at Winterbourne view or the managers.
The Equality Act 2010 legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace and in wider society. It replaced previous anti-discrimination laws with a single act, making the laws easier to understand and strengthening protection in some situations. It sets out the different ways in

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