Who Speaks for the Child: The Problems of Proxy ConsentWillard Gaylin, Ruth Macklin Springer Science & Business Media, 30. apr. 1982 - 315 sider |
Indhold
Who Speaks for the Child? | 3 |
Competence No Longer All or None | 27 |
The Competence of Children as SelfDeciders in Biomedical Interventions | 57 |
The Authority of Others to Decide about Biomedical Interventions with Incompetents | 115 |
Medical Care for the Child at Risk On State Supervention of Parental Autonomy | 153 |
Consent Representation and Proxy Consent | 191 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abortion adolescent adult age of majority Amish areas auton Autonomous right behalf behavior best interests Blood donation 17 blood transfusions capacity Chad Green Chapter chil child children's rights choice common law competence conflict consent to medical context court decide determine doctrine dren Drug abuse emancipation emergency ethical example family autonomy family privacy give Goldstein guardian guardians ad litem ical incompetent individual informed consent involved issue Jehovah's Witness Joseph Goldstein Judge judicial Karen limits MARGARET O'BRIEN maturity medical treatment ment mentally retarded minor moral notion objective parental authority parental autonomy parental consent parental decision parental responsibility paternalism patient person petent physician Pregnancy primary principle problem procedure protect proxy consent psychological question reasonable recognize refuse representative risk role rule social society standard Stat statutes subjective substitute judgment Supp surgery tion transplant treatment refusals values Willard Gaylin wishes York