The right to refuse medical treatment is based on a competent persons due process rights guaranteed by the fifth amendment. Incompetent persons do not have the right to refuse medical treatment. Instead, a process called “substituted judgement” is used to determine what care they will receive. A family member will then make medical decisions on behalf of the incompetent person while they are unable. Disagreements between guardians or between guardians and physicians lead to a court deciding the proper medical treatment. There two major challenges that arise with the substituted judgement process are that family members often do not know the wishes of the incompetent person and that there is no requirement for the family member to make decis...
Part I of this paper provides a comparison of the use of litigation and mediation in the health care...
Mediation is an alternative with the resolution of disputes that be a way out in doing with the reso...
Legislatures and courts throughout the United States have, until recently, been dragging their heels...
The right to refuse medical treatment is based on a competent persons due process rights guaranteed ...
The article considers mediation as a conciliatory procedure in the medical field. Subjects of medica...
This article will examine the problem of making medical decisions for those who cannot decide for th...
In the past decade, the United States healthcare system has begun to use mediation to facilitate com...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The therapeutic transaction agreement is an agreement between a doctor and a patient which is a lega...
This Comment will examine the applicability of mediation in the resolution of medical disputes and t...
The article discusses the procedural aspect of mediation as a way to resolve conflicts in the health...
  Mediation dispute resolution health was originally an alternative dispute resolution, when the ...
It is hypothesized that mediation in either a fault-based or a no-fault environment can make claims ...
Medical futility disputes occur frequently in healthcare facilities across the United States. In thi...
At this moment in history, tort reform and new approaches to resolving medical malpractice claims ar...
Part I of this paper provides a comparison of the use of litigation and mediation in the health care...
Mediation is an alternative with the resolution of disputes that be a way out in doing with the reso...
Legislatures and courts throughout the United States have, until recently, been dragging their heels...
The right to refuse medical treatment is based on a competent persons due process rights guaranteed ...
The article considers mediation as a conciliatory procedure in the medical field. Subjects of medica...
This article will examine the problem of making medical decisions for those who cannot decide for th...
In the past decade, the United States healthcare system has begun to use mediation to facilitate com...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
The therapeutic transaction agreement is an agreement between a doctor and a patient which is a lega...
This Comment will examine the applicability of mediation in the resolution of medical disputes and t...
The article discusses the procedural aspect of mediation as a way to resolve conflicts in the health...
  Mediation dispute resolution health was originally an alternative dispute resolution, when the ...
It is hypothesized that mediation in either a fault-based or a no-fault environment can make claims ...
Medical futility disputes occur frequently in healthcare facilities across the United States. In thi...
At this moment in history, tort reform and new approaches to resolving medical malpractice claims ar...
Part I of this paper provides a comparison of the use of litigation and mediation in the health care...
Mediation is an alternative with the resolution of disputes that be a way out in doing with the reso...
Legislatures and courts throughout the United States have, until recently, been dragging their heels...