Missouri’s Death-Prolonging Procedures Act of 1985 represents an effort to ensure that an individual’s choices regarding medical treatment will be honored, even if the individual becomes incompetent. This article considers the Act’s limiting structure and examines the effect of these limits on the effectiveness of the Act in providing a legal right to refuse medical treatment. Following an introduction, Part II describes the limiting structure of the Act. Part III considers the way in which the Act’s limitations relate to its binding effect. First, an individual’s declaration applies only to death-prolonging procedures and only if the individual is terminally ill. This definitional approach requires the attending physician to make complex...
Both medical and legal commentators contend that there is little legal risk for administering life-s...
Terminally ill patients in the United States have four medical options for controlling the time and ...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
Missouri’s Death-Prolonging Procedures Act of 1985 represents an effort to ensure that an individual...
The purposes of this Article are twofold. Our first purpose is to reexamine the legal foundations of...
The article discusses such topics as palliative sedation, assisted suicide, and euthanasia, as well ...
Medicine has made many advances in prolonging life artificially. As a result, people who in the past...
The article focuses on the issues of medical futility with respect to Louisiana Natural Death Act, a...
Biomedical advances nowadays enable physicians to keep patients hovering at the brink of death for m...
A recent decision from the Missouri Court of Appeals, In re Estate of Collins, holds that when a com...
The advances in the field of medical science during the past several decades have been significant
In the name of state interests, advance directive statutes almost universally include language requi...
Over the past twenty-five years, a significant number of surrogate decision makers have demanded tha...
This Article presents the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the individual decision to...
Can a competent individual refuse care in order to make their natural death reasonably foreseeable i...
Both medical and legal commentators contend that there is little legal risk for administering life-s...
Terminally ill patients in the United States have four medical options for controlling the time and ...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
Missouri’s Death-Prolonging Procedures Act of 1985 represents an effort to ensure that an individual...
The purposes of this Article are twofold. Our first purpose is to reexamine the legal foundations of...
The article discusses such topics as palliative sedation, assisted suicide, and euthanasia, as well ...
Medicine has made many advances in prolonging life artificially. As a result, people who in the past...
The article focuses on the issues of medical futility with respect to Louisiana Natural Death Act, a...
Biomedical advances nowadays enable physicians to keep patients hovering at the brink of death for m...
A recent decision from the Missouri Court of Appeals, In re Estate of Collins, holds that when a com...
The advances in the field of medical science during the past several decades have been significant
In the name of state interests, advance directive statutes almost universally include language requi...
Over the past twenty-five years, a significant number of surrogate decision makers have demanded tha...
This Article presents the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the individual decision to...
Can a competent individual refuse care in order to make their natural death reasonably foreseeable i...
Both medical and legal commentators contend that there is little legal risk for administering life-s...
Terminally ill patients in the United States have four medical options for controlling the time and ...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...