Judges and juries are increasingly being asked to settle questions about disease caused by hazardous products. With the growth of litigation on toxic substances and unsafe products, more and more courts must wrestle with the complicated scientific proof of the relation between exposure and disease or injury. This proof frequently involves the use of probabilistic evidence in the form of statistical tests and epidemiologic studies. Anglo-American law relies on deductive notions of causation and is suspicious of probabilistic evidence of causation. As a result, court decisions of hazardous substance cases are sometimes based on a confused understanding of the critical causal connection. Physicians who testify in such cases, either as the trea...
As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide v...
Epidemiological evidence is regularly presented to courts in determining proof of causation in medic...
Patients who have not been warned of risks involved in a course of treatment traditionally had to es...
Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between...
The requirements for proof of causation determine the extent to which the general public will be ex...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
Drs. Lynch & Henefin examine evolution of disease causation theory and its impact on public health, ...
Judges are the gatekeepers of evidence. Arguably, the most difficult duty for a judicial gatekeeper ...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
This article argues that the dilemma described above requires change and proposes a new standard for...
This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential unc...
THE SUPREMECOURT, BASED ON 3 DECISIONS OVER THEpast decade, now requires judges to examine the un-de...
Investigating causation is a primary goal in forensic/legal medicine, aiming to establish the connec...
In the United Kingdom, the most difficult aspect of proving a medical malpractice claim may be estab...
The decision in the Bailey v. Ministry of Defence case raises some interesting issues in relation to...
As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide v...
Epidemiological evidence is regularly presented to courts in determining proof of causation in medic...
Patients who have not been warned of risks involved in a course of treatment traditionally had to es...
Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between...
The requirements for proof of causation determine the extent to which the general public will be ex...
Causal inference lies at the heart of many legal questions. Yet in the context of complicated diseas...
Drs. Lynch & Henefin examine evolution of disease causation theory and its impact on public health, ...
Judges are the gatekeepers of evidence. Arguably, the most difficult duty for a judicial gatekeeper ...
The approach adopted by epidemiologists when attributing a causal mechanism to an observed statistic...
This article argues that the dilemma described above requires change and proposes a new standard for...
This book undertakes an analysis of academic and judicial responses to the problem of evidential unc...
THE SUPREMECOURT, BASED ON 3 DECISIONS OVER THEpast decade, now requires judges to examine the un-de...
Investigating causation is a primary goal in forensic/legal medicine, aiming to establish the connec...
In the United Kingdom, the most difficult aspect of proving a medical malpractice claim may be estab...
The decision in the Bailey v. Ministry of Defence case raises some interesting issues in relation to...
As a first step to preserving the central aims of tort law, courts will need to recognize the wide v...
Epidemiological evidence is regularly presented to courts in determining proof of causation in medic...
Patients who have not been warned of risks involved in a course of treatment traditionally had to es...