Advances made by medical science are able to extend human life, sometimes by highly technical means such as life-support systems. Often these procedures prove life-saving, and the patient recovers fully; at other times, however, life-extending treatment is futile, such as when the patient is declared brain dead. Advances in reproductive technologies, similarly, have been able bring hope by treating and curing infertility. This article responds to an article by Professor McQuoid-Mason entitled 'Terminating the pregnancy of a brain-dead mother: Does a fetus have a right to life?’ He examines the law in South Africa and the legal implications of the Munoz case, which concerned an application for a court order to have a brain-dead pregnant w...
In the recent Texas case of Munoz v. John Peter Smith Hospital, the court granted a husband an order...
More than thirty-four years after the United States Supreme Court initially recognized a woman's con...
A recent article on the Texas case of Munoz v John Peter Smith Hospital, begs the question whether i...
Advances made by medical science are able to extend human life, sometimes by highly technical means...
Should a brain dead pregnant person be kept alive on life support, despite the family\u27s wishes ot...
In this article, the author examines conflicts over whether to maintain a brain dead pregnant woman ...
Brain death is different from the traditional, biological conception of death. Although there is no ...
In the recent Texas case of Munoz v John Peter Smith Hospital, a husband obtained a court order for ...
In PP v Health Service Executive, the Irish High Court was recently asked to decide on the lawfulnes...
What are the legal and ethical implications of continuing to treat a brain dead patient? And may a h...
Both many critics of abortion and many defenders of abortion have suggested that artificial wombs co...
Modern medical technology accords physicians the capacity to prolong life and to protract the durati...
Feminist bioethicists of a variety of persuasions discuss the 2013 case of Marlise Munoz, a pregnant...
It is possible to retrieve viable sperm from a dying man or from a recently dead body. This sperm ca...
Technological advances in medicine have changed the landscape of fetal medicine considerably. Growin...
In the recent Texas case of Munoz v. John Peter Smith Hospital, the court granted a husband an order...
More than thirty-four years after the United States Supreme Court initially recognized a woman's con...
A recent article on the Texas case of Munoz v John Peter Smith Hospital, begs the question whether i...
Advances made by medical science are able to extend human life, sometimes by highly technical means...
Should a brain dead pregnant person be kept alive on life support, despite the family\u27s wishes ot...
In this article, the author examines conflicts over whether to maintain a brain dead pregnant woman ...
Brain death is different from the traditional, biological conception of death. Although there is no ...
In the recent Texas case of Munoz v John Peter Smith Hospital, a husband obtained a court order for ...
In PP v Health Service Executive, the Irish High Court was recently asked to decide on the lawfulnes...
What are the legal and ethical implications of continuing to treat a brain dead patient? And may a h...
Both many critics of abortion and many defenders of abortion have suggested that artificial wombs co...
Modern medical technology accords physicians the capacity to prolong life and to protract the durati...
Feminist bioethicists of a variety of persuasions discuss the 2013 case of Marlise Munoz, a pregnant...
It is possible to retrieve viable sperm from a dying man or from a recently dead body. This sperm ca...
Technological advances in medicine have changed the landscape of fetal medicine considerably. Growin...
In the recent Texas case of Munoz v. John Peter Smith Hospital, the court granted a husband an order...
More than thirty-four years after the United States Supreme Court initially recognized a woman's con...
A recent article on the Texas case of Munoz v John Peter Smith Hospital, begs the question whether i...