A physician decides not to prolong the life of a terminal patient. What are the legal consequences? Is it murder, akin to a gunman\u27s pulling the trigger? Or is the law more sensitive? Professor Fletcher proposes that a decision to interrupt life-sustaining therapy, such as that to turn off a mechanical respirator, should be classified as an omission, not an act. He arrives at this conclusion by analyzing the common sense usages of cause and permit. If the decision is an omission then the law must focus on the doctor-patient relationship to define legal consequences, allowing customary standards of the relationship to be the controlling criteria. Thus a heavy responsibility is placed on the medical profession to develop humane and sen...
While the vast majority of fatally afflicted persons have a powerful wish to remain alive, some stri...
Two physicians were charged with murder for discontinuing mechanical ventilation and intravenous flu...
The seven deadly sins of the status quo -- inhumanity, paternalism, Utilitarianism, hypocrisy, lawle...
A physician decides not to prolong the life of a terminal patient. What are the legal consequences? ...
Traditional medical ethics and law draw a sharp distinction between allowing a patient to die and he...
Doctors who hasten the termination of the lives of their patients by withholding or withdrawing trea...
This essay, a revised version of the United States report on Euthanasia to be presented at the XVII ...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
The paper discusses the view of Franklin Miller and Robert Truog that withdrawing life-sustaining tr...
A true doctor-assisted suicide can be distinguished from euthanasia in that the patient is actuall...
This article examines Finnis' and Keown's claim that the intention/foresight distinction should be u...
How we die is increasingly becoming a matter of law and public policy. We grapple with issues of pat...
The purpose of this review is to prove that there is no moral difference between killing and letting...
There is a clear legal distinction in Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States between w...
This paper examines the recent prominent view in medical ethics that withdrawing life-sustaining tre...
While the vast majority of fatally afflicted persons have a powerful wish to remain alive, some stri...
Two physicians were charged with murder for discontinuing mechanical ventilation and intravenous flu...
The seven deadly sins of the status quo -- inhumanity, paternalism, Utilitarianism, hypocrisy, lawle...
A physician decides not to prolong the life of a terminal patient. What are the legal consequences? ...
Traditional medical ethics and law draw a sharp distinction between allowing a patient to die and he...
Doctors who hasten the termination of the lives of their patients by withholding or withdrawing trea...
This essay, a revised version of the United States report on Euthanasia to be presented at the XVII ...
This Article discusses the limits of how end of life law can address threats to patient autonomy. Th...
The paper discusses the view of Franklin Miller and Robert Truog that withdrawing life-sustaining tr...
A true doctor-assisted suicide can be distinguished from euthanasia in that the patient is actuall...
This article examines Finnis' and Keown's claim that the intention/foresight distinction should be u...
How we die is increasingly becoming a matter of law and public policy. We grapple with issues of pat...
The purpose of this review is to prove that there is no moral difference between killing and letting...
There is a clear legal distinction in Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States between w...
This paper examines the recent prominent view in medical ethics that withdrawing life-sustaining tre...
While the vast majority of fatally afflicted persons have a powerful wish to remain alive, some stri...
Two physicians were charged with murder for discontinuing mechanical ventilation and intravenous flu...
The seven deadly sins of the status quo -- inhumanity, paternalism, Utilitarianism, hypocrisy, lawle...