A woman with learning difficulties could be forcibly sterilised after she gives birth this week to stop her becoming pregnant again.

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© Healthwise Inc.Methods of how female sterilization is performed.
The secretive Court of Protection will rule on the woman's case on Tuesday, in a rare open hearing scheduled because of the overwhelming "public interest" in understanding the case.

She is due to give birth by cesarean section on Wednesday and could undergo an operation to sterilise her at the same time, if the court agrees.

Disability campaigners described the prospect of such a "drastic" step as "quite wrong".

The woman will be represented by the official solicitor, a government lawyer who represents those who cannot instruct their own legal team because they lack capacity.

The patient's local NHS trust and council have made an application to the Court of Protection to decide whether she lacks the capacity to make decisions about contraception for herself - and if so, whether she should be sterilized by means of "tubal ligation".

The "non therapeutic sterilization" operation would involve severing and sealing her fallopian tubes and would take place at the same time as the caesarean.

Critics argue that forcible sterilization is too radical a procedure to be conducted without consent while other options such as a long-term contraceptive solution should be considered.

David Congdon, head of policy at the disability charity Mencap, said sterilization without consent was "awful and unacceptable" but rare in modern times.

"It is a pretty drastic step to sterilize someone against their will simply because they lack the mental capacity themselves," he said.

"It is a gross invasion of someone's basic rights unless there are clear medical grounds and there do not appear to be in this case.

"Using sterilization as a form of contraception is totally unacceptable. There are other methods of contraception," he said. "Years ago there were lots of cases like this but we hear of very few these days."

He urged the court to "tread very carefully" before coming to a decision.

Due to legal restrictions, no details about the woman's identity, family or location can be published.

But court documents stress "the legitimate public interest" in understanding the case and the issues that it raises about the power of the state to order "serious medical treatment" for a patient who is unable to give their own consent.

Most Court of Protection cases are heard behind closed doors at its north London offices.

The court has the power to make life or death decisions on behalf of some of the most vulnerable people in society.

Under the Mental Capacity Act 2005, the Court can decide on medical treatments for individuals judged by psychiatrists to lack mental capacity.

Cases that come before the court include proposals to withhold or withdraw artificial nutrition and hydration from a person in a permanent vegetative state.

The court can also order "terminations of pregnancy" for women who lack capacity to consent, as well as "experimental or innovative treatment" and medical procedures that require the use of force to restrain the patient.