White v. Napoleon and its progeny recognize a substantive due process right to receive the disclosure of medical treatment information. While each case involves a prisoner receiving treatment while in custody, the constitutional right described in those cases is not limited to prisoners. Instead, the right is described as belonging to all individuals. Consequently, this line of cases is poised to interfere with the disclosure standards that operate in state informed consent law in the many instances where state action exists. This Article argues that the substantive due process right recognized in White should be overturned. The right is based on an erroneous assumption that the Constitution protects an interest in autonomous medical decisi...
This article examines the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Bounds v. Smith and the movement toward rec...
Prisoners who believe their constitutional rights were violated through deficient medical care can p...
Prisoners’ rights to bodily privacy under the Fourth Amendment are limited, allowing detention offic...
The recent Supreme Court decision invalidating state abortion statutes, the much-publicized Michigan...
Correctional institutions have an Eighth Amendment obligation to provide healthcare to inmates. In p...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
The U.S. Reports contain no answer to a million-dollar question: are state prisoners constitutionall...
Those jurisdictions that require the physician to disclose to the patient all material risks inciden...
The right to self-determination, including the decision on treatment, is affirmed in modern societie...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
Inmates in penal institutions have historically been afforded less than the full panoply of procedur...
Currently, approximately 1.8 million people are incarcerated in the United States at any given time....
The Supreme Court has taken very different approaches to the question whether individuals have a rig...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
The objective of this thesis is to provide a summary and a comparison of the rights of prisoners to ...
This article examines the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Bounds v. Smith and the movement toward rec...
Prisoners who believe their constitutional rights were violated through deficient medical care can p...
Prisoners’ rights to bodily privacy under the Fourth Amendment are limited, allowing detention offic...
The recent Supreme Court decision invalidating state abortion statutes, the much-publicized Michigan...
Correctional institutions have an Eighth Amendment obligation to provide healthcare to inmates. In p...
Only one group of people in the United States has a constitutional right to health care—the incarcer...
The U.S. Reports contain no answer to a million-dollar question: are state prisoners constitutionall...
Those jurisdictions that require the physician to disclose to the patient all material risks inciden...
The right to self-determination, including the decision on treatment, is affirmed in modern societie...
Local police officers entered the private office of petitioner, a practising physician, without a wa...
Inmates in penal institutions have historically been afforded less than the full panoply of procedur...
Currently, approximately 1.8 million people are incarcerated in the United States at any given time....
The Supreme Court has taken very different approaches to the question whether individuals have a rig...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
The objective of this thesis is to provide a summary and a comparison of the rights of prisoners to ...
This article examines the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Bounds v. Smith and the movement toward rec...
Prisoners who believe their constitutional rights were violated through deficient medical care can p...
Prisoners’ rights to bodily privacy under the Fourth Amendment are limited, allowing detention offic...