Harman Patil (Editor)

National AIDS Trust v NHS Service Commissioning Board

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Court
  
High Court of Justice, Court of Appeal of England and Wales

Decided
  
2 August 2016 (2016-08-02) (High Court) 10 November 2016 (2016-11-10) (Appeal)

Citation(s)
  
[2016] EWHC 2005 (Admin) (High Court)

Judge(s) sitting
  
Mr Justice Green (High Court) Lady Justice King (Appeal) Lord Justice Longmore (Appeal) Lord Justice Underhill (Appeal)

National AIDS Trust v NHS Service Commissioning Board, [2016] EWHC 2005 (Admin), was a court case before the High Court of Justice seeking judicial review regarding National Health Service funding for pre-exposure prophylaxis.

The provision of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in the British National Health Service to prevent HIV infection has been the subject of much controversy. AIDS campaigners have lobbied for the NHS to approve the treatment to prevent the spread of HIV among members of high-risk groups such as gay men. NHS management considered PrEP to be a preventative treatment that they were not legally able to provide funding for, but should instead be funded by local councils.

The issue was taken by the National AIDS Trust to a judicial review by the High Court. In 2016, the High Court determined that NHS England had the power to provide PrEP treatment to these groups. As of August 2016, NHS England is planning to appeal the judgment in the Court of Appeal, while also making plans to prepare to implement the wider use of PrEP if the judgment is upheld. To ensure it had sufficient funding to cover the £10m–20m annual cost of PrEP if it was prioritised, NHS England announced that it could no longer guarantee it would be able to commission nine other treatments and services which it had provisionally earmarked for funding.

NHS England lost their appeal, with Lady Justice Eleanor King and Lord Justices Andrew Longmore and Nicholas Underhill finding in favour of the National AIDS Trust on 10 November 2016, with Public Health England announcing a 3-year large-scale trial seeking to enrol over 10,000 people a few weeks later. Subsequent freedom of information requests showed that NHS England spent over £100,000 fighting the case, not including NAT's legal fees, estimated at a further £8,000.

References

National AIDS Trust v NHS Service Commissioning Board Wikipedia