Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights supports the right to participate in decisions that affect our lives. Article 8 was a relevant factor in the Supreme Court decision of Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board [2015] which makes significant advances in patient-centred care. Focusing on adult patients with capacity, this article considers article 8’s influence across three routes to participatory protection: the right to choose, the duty to consult, and the right to know. We set out current limitations of the right to choose and consider the potential for article 8 to influence the extension of a wider duty to consult and right to know. We find that there are impediments to legal development. Patient status leads to the eleva...
This article examines the relevant international law relating to informed consent to treatment for i...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 sets out a ground-breaking statutory framework to empower and protect v...
An earlier article (Cornock 2014) discussed what consent is, the legal principles of consent and the...
Professional control in the selection of treatment or investigatory options for patients is changing...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
Introducing Autonomy, Consent and the Law,1 Sheila McLean remarks that if the law is ‘to facilitate ...
Affirming the doctrine of informed consent, the UK Supreme Court in Montgomery v Lanarkshire HB bela...
Over time, medical law has moved away from paternalism in favour of an approach grounded in patients...
It is an internationally recognized principle that patients should give their informed consent to a ...
In 1989, the House of Lords first derived a ‘best interests’ test for the medical treatment of adult...
When consent to medical treatment is described as ‘valid’, it might simply mean that it has a sound ...
Patients’ rights can be seen as a precondition to empowering people and moving to health systems tha...
The UK Clinical Trials Regulations were amended in 2006 and 2008 to facilitate research on medicinal...
A momentous event in British legal history was the introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998.1 Docto...
Since the mid-Twentieth Century, doctors have been obliged in law and policy to inform their patient...
This article examines the relevant international law relating to informed consent to treatment for i...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 sets out a ground-breaking statutory framework to empower and protect v...
An earlier article (Cornock 2014) discussed what consent is, the legal principles of consent and the...
Professional control in the selection of treatment or investigatory options for patients is changing...
Patients have a right to autonomy that encompasses making medical decisions that others consider ‘ba...
Introducing Autonomy, Consent and the Law,1 Sheila McLean remarks that if the law is ‘to facilitate ...
Affirming the doctrine of informed consent, the UK Supreme Court in Montgomery v Lanarkshire HB bela...
Over time, medical law has moved away from paternalism in favour of an approach grounded in patients...
It is an internationally recognized principle that patients should give their informed consent to a ...
In 1989, the House of Lords first derived a ‘best interests’ test for the medical treatment of adult...
When consent to medical treatment is described as ‘valid’, it might simply mean that it has a sound ...
Patients’ rights can be seen as a precondition to empowering people and moving to health systems tha...
The UK Clinical Trials Regulations were amended in 2006 and 2008 to facilitate research on medicinal...
A momentous event in British legal history was the introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998.1 Docto...
Since the mid-Twentieth Century, doctors have been obliged in law and policy to inform their patient...
This article examines the relevant international law relating to informed consent to treatment for i...
The Mental Capacity Act 2005 sets out a ground-breaking statutory framework to empower and protect v...
An earlier article (Cornock 2014) discussed what consent is, the legal principles of consent and the...