This paper explores the interaction of British medical practitioners with the nascent intellectual property system in the nineteenth century. It challenges the generally accepted view that throughout the nineteenth century there was a settled or professionally agreed hostility to patenting. It demonstrates that medical practitioners made more substantial use of the patent system and related forms of protection than has previously been recognised. Nevertheless, the rate of patenting remained lower than in other fields of technical endeavour, but this can largely be explained by the public nature of medical practice during this period. This paper therefore seeks to retell the history of the exclusion of medical methods from patent protection,...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
I am grateful to Julian Hoppit, Trevor Burnard, Robert Burrell, Catherine Kelly, and Anton Howes for...
Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’...
This paper explores the interaction of British medical practitioners with the nascent intellectual p...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
This thesis makes an historical and contemporaneous analysis of patenting of methods of medical trea...
This paper surveys the recent historiography of three national patent systems during the period of t...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
In 1909, the British Medical Association published an exposé of the patent medicine trade, Secret Re...
Many patent law dilemmas arise from a failure to understand technologies as embedded in broader soci...
The origins of contemporary exclusion of surgical methods from patenting lie in the complexities of ...
An academic lifetime of research on patents for invention led to conviction of how unfit for purpose...
This is the final version of the article. Available from CUP via the DOI in this record.Restoration ...
International audienceThe history of patents in the health field has been characterized by conflicts...
Methods of medical treatment are not patentable in Canada. This means that inventions involving the ...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
I am grateful to Julian Hoppit, Trevor Burnard, Robert Burrell, Catherine Kelly, and Anton Howes for...
Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’...
This paper explores the interaction of British medical practitioners with the nascent intellectual p...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
This thesis makes an historical and contemporaneous analysis of patenting of methods of medical trea...
This paper surveys the recent historiography of three national patent systems during the period of t...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
In 1909, the British Medical Association published an exposé of the patent medicine trade, Secret Re...
Many patent law dilemmas arise from a failure to understand technologies as embedded in broader soci...
The origins of contemporary exclusion of surgical methods from patenting lie in the complexities of ...
An academic lifetime of research on patents for invention led to conviction of how unfit for purpose...
This is the final version of the article. Available from CUP via the DOI in this record.Restoration ...
International audienceThe history of patents in the health field has been characterized by conflicts...
Methods of medical treatment are not patentable in Canada. This means that inventions involving the ...
In this extract from "Principles of Medical Law", Laurie considers the current state of play regardi...
I am grateful to Julian Hoppit, Trevor Burnard, Robert Burrell, Catherine Kelly, and Anton Howes for...
Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’...