In 2014, Lord Saatchi launched his ultimately unsuccessful Medical Innovation Bill in the UK. Its laudable aim was to free doctors from the shackles that prevented them from providing responsible innovative treatment. Lord Saatchi’s principal contention was that current law was the unsurmountable barrier that prevented clinicians from delivering innovative treatments to cancer patients when conventional options had failed. This was because doctors feared that they might be sued or tried and convicted of gross negligence manslaughter if they deviated from standard practice. Concerns about fear of the law and potential negative effects on medical practice are not new. Fear of litigation has been suggested as the reason for doctors practising ...
This book provides an important analysis of what happens when trust between doctors and patients bre...
There exists a considerable body of literature, across jurisdictions in the common law world, and in...
In a 2015 prosecution which divided public opinion, Dr Bawa-Garba was convicted of gross negligence...
In 2014, Lord Saatchi launched his ultimately unsuccessful Medical Innovation Bill in the UK. Its la...
In 2014, Lord Saatchi launched his ultimately unsuccessful Medical Innovation Bill in the UK. Its la...
Objective: This paper aims to demonstrate that any suggestion that there is a need for specific inno...
Lord Saatchi’s Medical Innovation Bill, which has been reintroduced into parliament, is a deeply fla...
The current debate surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill purports to be aimed at improving the nor...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
The regulation of the medical profession in the UK has undergone a period of far-reaching reform ove...
This special issue features papers culminating from a six seminar ESRC series ‘Liability versus inno...
This thesis has proposed a fourth model of contact between patient and doctor, that of innovation. T...
The focus of the debates surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill and Access to Medical Treatments (I...
The focus of the debates surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill and Access to Medical Treatments (I...
Fear of malpractice actions against them is causing physicians to run scared. Some physicians now ...
This book provides an important analysis of what happens when trust between doctors and patients bre...
There exists a considerable body of literature, across jurisdictions in the common law world, and in...
In a 2015 prosecution which divided public opinion, Dr Bawa-Garba was convicted of gross negligence...
In 2014, Lord Saatchi launched his ultimately unsuccessful Medical Innovation Bill in the UK. Its la...
In 2014, Lord Saatchi launched his ultimately unsuccessful Medical Innovation Bill in the UK. Its la...
Objective: This paper aims to demonstrate that any suggestion that there is a need for specific inno...
Lord Saatchi’s Medical Innovation Bill, which has been reintroduced into parliament, is a deeply fla...
The current debate surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill purports to be aimed at improving the nor...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
The regulation of the medical profession in the UK has undergone a period of far-reaching reform ove...
This special issue features papers culminating from a six seminar ESRC series ‘Liability versus inno...
This thesis has proposed a fourth model of contact between patient and doctor, that of innovation. T...
The focus of the debates surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill and Access to Medical Treatments (I...
The focus of the debates surrounding the Medical Innovation Bill and Access to Medical Treatments (I...
Fear of malpractice actions against them is causing physicians to run scared. Some physicians now ...
This book provides an important analysis of what happens when trust between doctors and patients bre...
There exists a considerable body of literature, across jurisdictions in the common law world, and in...
In a 2015 prosecution which divided public opinion, Dr Bawa-Garba was convicted of gross negligence...