The Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case of Carter versus Canada (2015 SCC 5) concerns the right of a competent adult to a physician-assisted death if his or her suffering from a grievous and irremediable medical condition is intolerable. Discussions of the ruling have extended the parameters to include competent minors and advanced directives. They may also have altered the way we look at a separate but related end-of-life scenario, withdrawal of life-support; the number of anesthetic agents used to cover a patient during the withdrawal of life-support appear to have increased recently.How is it that all our legal and religious traditions imply that an abhorrence of terminating life is built into civilization, and yet a group of empa...
End of life scenarios must be patient driven and focused. In this thesis it is argued that patient i...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
The attention that the Schiavo case has brought to end-of-life decisionmaking presents an opportunit...
The Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case of Carter versus Canada (2015 SCC 5) concerns the rig...
This article examines the circumstances in which life support can legally be withheld or withdrawn f...
Healthcare professionals often confront difficult issues in end-of-life care. Caregivers who questio...
In a hospital in the State of Washington, at the direction of family-member surrogates, the feeding ...
Background: End-of-life decisions regarding the administration, withdrawal or withholding of life-su...
The significance of quality of life factors in end of life decisions cannot be overstressed. However...
How we die is increasingly becoming a matter of law and public policy. We grapple with issues of pat...
This case study discusses the challenges of end-of-life decision-making in practice, focusing on the...
Background: Concerns about decision making related to resuscitation have led to two important chall...
Introduction: On February 6th, 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) concluded that “the prohibiti...
Abstract‘Suffering’ is a central discursive trope for the right-to-die movement. In this article, we...
Conflict at the end-of-life, particularly between families and health-care providers, involves many ...
End of life scenarios must be patient driven and focused. In this thesis it is argued that patient i...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
The attention that the Schiavo case has brought to end-of-life decisionmaking presents an opportunit...
The Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case of Carter versus Canada (2015 SCC 5) concerns the rig...
This article examines the circumstances in which life support can legally be withheld or withdrawn f...
Healthcare professionals often confront difficult issues in end-of-life care. Caregivers who questio...
In a hospital in the State of Washington, at the direction of family-member surrogates, the feeding ...
Background: End-of-life decisions regarding the administration, withdrawal or withholding of life-su...
The significance of quality of life factors in end of life decisions cannot be overstressed. However...
How we die is increasingly becoming a matter of law and public policy. We grapple with issues of pat...
This case study discusses the challenges of end-of-life decision-making in practice, focusing on the...
Background: Concerns about decision making related to resuscitation have led to two important chall...
Introduction: On February 6th, 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) concluded that “the prohibiti...
Abstract‘Suffering’ is a central discursive trope for the right-to-die movement. In this article, we...
Conflict at the end-of-life, particularly between families and health-care providers, involves many ...
End of life scenarios must be patient driven and focused. In this thesis it is argued that patient i...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
The attention that the Schiavo case has brought to end-of-life decisionmaking presents an opportunit...