Disputes about withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatment are increasingly coming before Australian Supreme Courts. Such cases are generally heard in the parens patriae jurisdiction where the test applied is what is in the patient’s “best interests”. However, the application of the “best interests” test, and its meaning, remains unclear in this context. To shed light on this emerging body of jurisprudence, this article analyses the Australian superior court decisions that consider an adult’s best interests in the context of decisions about life-sustaining treatment. We identify a number of themes from the current body of cases and consider how these themes may guide future decision-making. After then considering the law in the Un...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
This article examines the law in Australia and New Zealand that governs the withholding and withdraw...
The publicity given to the request by a Western Australian man with quadriplegia to have artificial ...
Intractable disputes about withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatment from adults who lac...
Decisions about whether to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining medical treatment from children give...
The current law and practice surrounding decision-making for adult patients who lack capacity, becau...
• At common law, a competent adult can refuse life-sustaining medical treatment, either contemporane...
In the UK, decisions taken on behalf of patients who lack capacity must be in their best interests, ...
This article examines the circumstances in which life support can legally be withheld or withdrawn f...
In Wye Valley NHS Trust v Mr B the Court of Protection decided that it was not in the best interests...
The ideal way through life for each of us is a journey, where we can control our own lives and make ...
This article considers the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom case Aintree University Hospitals NHS...
In Wye Valley NHS Trust v Mr B the Court of Protection decided that it was not in the best interests...
This is the first article in a series of three that examines the legal role of medical professionals...
This is the first article in a series of three that examines the legal role of medical professionals...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
This article examines the law in Australia and New Zealand that governs the withholding and withdraw...
The publicity given to the request by a Western Australian man with quadriplegia to have artificial ...
Intractable disputes about withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining treatment from adults who lac...
Decisions about whether to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining medical treatment from children give...
The current law and practice surrounding decision-making for adult patients who lack capacity, becau...
• At common law, a competent adult can refuse life-sustaining medical treatment, either contemporane...
In the UK, decisions taken on behalf of patients who lack capacity must be in their best interests, ...
This article examines the circumstances in which life support can legally be withheld or withdrawn f...
In Wye Valley NHS Trust v Mr B the Court of Protection decided that it was not in the best interests...
The ideal way through life for each of us is a journey, where we can control our own lives and make ...
This article considers the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom case Aintree University Hospitals NHS...
In Wye Valley NHS Trust v Mr B the Court of Protection decided that it was not in the best interests...
This is the first article in a series of three that examines the legal role of medical professionals...
This is the first article in a series of three that examines the legal role of medical professionals...
Four-year-old Tafida Raqeeb suffered a sudden and catastrophic brain injury resulting from a rare co...
This article examines the law in Australia and New Zealand that governs the withholding and withdraw...
The publicity given to the request by a Western Australian man with quadriplegia to have artificial ...