First Do No Harm: Law, Ethics and HealthcareSheila A. M. McLean Routledge, 15. apr. 2016 - 624 sider This collection brings together essays from leading figures in the field of medical law and ethics which address the key issues currently challenging scholars in the field. It has also been compiled as a lasting testimony to the work of one of the most eminent scholars in the area, Professor Ken Mason. The collection marks the academic crowning of a career which has laid one of the foundation stones of an entire discipline. The wide-ranging contents and the standing of the contributors mean that the volume will be an invaluable resource for anyone studying or working in medical law or medical ethics. |
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Law, Ethics and Healthcare Sheila A. M. McLean. Jean McHale 15. Continuing Conundrums in Competency John Devereux 16. Chester v. Afshar: Sayonara, Sub Silentio, Sidaway? David Meyers 17. 'Informed Consent' to Medical Treatment and the ...
Law, Ethics and Healthcare Sheila A. M. McLean. Jean McHale 15. Continuing Conundrums in Competency John Devereux 16. Chester v. Afshar: Sayonara, Sub Silentio, Sidaway? David Meyers 17. 'Informed Consent' to Medical Treatment and the ...
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... medical law (as traditionally practised) can be seen in the case of Burke v. GMC.22 The case concerned a challenge to guidance issued by the GMC on decisions about withholding life-sustaining treatment. Leslie Burke was concerned that ...
... medical law (as traditionally practised) can be seen in the case of Burke v. GMC.22 The case concerned a challenge to guidance issued by the GMC on decisions about withholding life-sustaining treatment. Leslie Burke was concerned that ...
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Law, Ethics and Healthcare Sheila A. M. McLean. refusal of treatment. Competent patients are entitled to choose to refuse treatment that is objectively good for them, even irrationally. This protection of their autonomy ensures that ...
Law, Ethics and Healthcare Sheila A. M. McLean. refusal of treatment. Competent patients are entitled to choose to refuse treatment that is objectively good for them, even irrationally. This protection of their autonomy ensures that ...
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... medical treatment might be withheld or withdrawn we might begin with the maxim that it is always wrong to give medical treatment to a dead body. Moving out from that paradigm we might ask in what way a permanent vegetative state is like ...
... medical treatment might be withheld or withdrawn we might begin with the maxim that it is always wrong to give medical treatment to a dead body. Moving out from that paradigm we might ask in what way a permanent vegetative state is like ...
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... care more exclusively to accredited physicians. Today, the evidence-based, care-motivated ideals of the Hippocratic physicians are the foundation of modern medical practice as a global institution, with no serious challengers to its ...
... care more exclusively to accredited physicians. Today, the evidence-based, care-motivated ideals of the Hippocratic physicians are the foundation of modern medical practice as a global institution, with no serious challengers to its ...
Indhold
5 | |
From Ethics to | |
Ethical and Policy Issues Related to Medical Error and Patient Safety | |
What Place for the Public Good? | |
Reflections on the Rise and Rise of Patient Choice | |
Sayonara Sub Silentio Sidaway? | |
Informed Consent to Medical Treatment and the Impotence of Tort | |
Some Problems Concerning the Dead and | |
No More Shock Horror? The Declining Significance of Sudden Shock and | |
Is There a Right Not to Procreate? | |
A Shield or a Sword? | |
The Case for Decriminalising | |
Whats Love Got to Do With It? Regulating Reproductive Technologies | |
Conceptualising Privacy in Relation to Medical Research Values | |
Why Patients Participate in Clinical Trials | |
Humans as Medicines | |
Safeguarding Altruism and Trust | |
Law Reform Clinical Research and Adults without Mental Capacity Much | |
Continuing Conundrums in Competency | |
Saviour Siblings | |
Some | |
LifeProlonging Treatment and Patients Legal Rights | |
Euthanasia as a Human Right | |
Defending the Council of Europes Opposition to Euthanasia | |
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