In this article, I examine the role of minors’ competence for medical decision-making in abstract modern American law. The doctrine of parental consent remains the default legal and bioethical framework for health care decisions on behalf of children, complemented by a complex array of exceptions. Some of those exceptions vest decisional authority in the minors themselves. Yet, in American law, judgments of minors’ competence do not typically trigger shifts in decision-making authority from adults to minors. Rather, minors’ decisional capacity becomes relevant only after legislatures or courts determine that the default of parental discretion does not achieve important policy goals or protect implicated constitutional rights in a particular...
The article examines the theoretical and normative context of a child’s autonomous decision making i...
Society has a need for children to be able to make health care decisions. Homeless children need acc...
A dearth of clinical research involving children has resulted in off-licence and sometimes inappropr...
Primary care is fundamentally about first-contact healthcare accessible to all. It is undifferentia...
Many children approaching the age of majority struggle with severe and sometimes terminal illnesses....
This article explores the relationship between competence and authority in relation to medical treat...
Medical decision-making is one area where drawing and applying a single defining line between childh...
The school nurse cannot give your teenage daughter an aspirin for her headache without your permissi...
This brief will explore the legal topic of the mature minor doctrine, and developmental differences ...
This paper examines whether the United States should develop a formal process regulating whether a m...
I. Introduction II. Historical Rights of Parents and Modern Infringement by the State … A. Necessity...
Healthcare providers must obtain consent before performing any procedure or providing treatment to a...
By examining the Court\u27s failure to consider the allocation of authority between parents and chil...
Few people believe that five year olds and fifteen year olds think, act or make decisions in the sam...
For decades, the discussion on children's competence to consent to medical issues has concentrated a...
The article examines the theoretical and normative context of a child’s autonomous decision making i...
Society has a need for children to be able to make health care decisions. Homeless children need acc...
A dearth of clinical research involving children has resulted in off-licence and sometimes inappropr...
Primary care is fundamentally about first-contact healthcare accessible to all. It is undifferentia...
Many children approaching the age of majority struggle with severe and sometimes terminal illnesses....
This article explores the relationship between competence and authority in relation to medical treat...
Medical decision-making is one area where drawing and applying a single defining line between childh...
The school nurse cannot give your teenage daughter an aspirin for her headache without your permissi...
This brief will explore the legal topic of the mature minor doctrine, and developmental differences ...
This paper examines whether the United States should develop a formal process regulating whether a m...
I. Introduction II. Historical Rights of Parents and Modern Infringement by the State … A. Necessity...
Healthcare providers must obtain consent before performing any procedure or providing treatment to a...
By examining the Court\u27s failure to consider the allocation of authority between parents and chil...
Few people believe that five year olds and fifteen year olds think, act or make decisions in the sam...
For decades, the discussion on children's competence to consent to medical issues has concentrated a...
The article examines the theoretical and normative context of a child’s autonomous decision making i...
Society has a need for children to be able to make health care decisions. Homeless children need acc...
A dearth of clinical research involving children has resulted in off-licence and sometimes inappropr...