This article considers mediation as a means of resolving decision-making disputes between clinicians and parents in paediatric end-of-life cases. It examines the legal tests applied in England and Wales, and notes the lack of precedent in Scotland. The advantages, disadvantages and the most appropriate style of mediation are analysed. The conclusion reached is that, whilst mediation offers benefits over litigation, mediation in its current form is not necessarily the ideal dispute resolution method in such cases. For it to be so, a legal and governance framework will be required
The article considers mediation as a conciliatory procedure in the medical field. Subjects of medica...
Mediation has been touted as the magic band-aid to solve end-of-life conflicts. When families and he...
This article is concerned with the recent development of court-connected mediation in the context of...
This article considers mediation as a means of resolving decision-making disputes between clinicians...
This briefing note provides a summary of the findings from a project looking at dispute resolution i...
This article considers proposals to reform the law in response to recent high profile cases concerni...
The cases of Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans placed the withdrawal of treatment from terminally ill inf...
Recently, the English courts have dealt with a number high-profile, emotive disputes over the care o...
Recent cases concerning disagreements over the medical treatment of a child with cancer prompt consi...
The right to refuse medical treatment is based on a competent persons due process rights guaranteed ...
In the medical treatment of children disputes can arise where parents cannot agree with one another,...
Making decisions on behalf of another person about their end of life care is inherently complex and ...
Mr Justice Francis ended his judgment in Great Ormond Street Hospital v Yates, Gard and Gard with th...
A hefty decision, such as the life or death of a loved one, requires more than a few minutes of deli...
ArticleThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis ...
The article considers mediation as a conciliatory procedure in the medical field. Subjects of medica...
Mediation has been touted as the magic band-aid to solve end-of-life conflicts. When families and he...
This article is concerned with the recent development of court-connected mediation in the context of...
This article considers mediation as a means of resolving decision-making disputes between clinicians...
This briefing note provides a summary of the findings from a project looking at dispute resolution i...
This article considers proposals to reform the law in response to recent high profile cases concerni...
The cases of Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans placed the withdrawal of treatment from terminally ill inf...
Recently, the English courts have dealt with a number high-profile, emotive disputes over the care o...
Recent cases concerning disagreements over the medical treatment of a child with cancer prompt consi...
The right to refuse medical treatment is based on a competent persons due process rights guaranteed ...
In the medical treatment of children disputes can arise where parents cannot agree with one another,...
Making decisions on behalf of another person about their end of life care is inherently complex and ...
Mr Justice Francis ended his judgment in Great Ormond Street Hospital v Yates, Gard and Gard with th...
A hefty decision, such as the life or death of a loved one, requires more than a few minutes of deli...
ArticleThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis ...
The article considers mediation as a conciliatory procedure in the medical field. Subjects of medica...
Mediation has been touted as the magic band-aid to solve end-of-life conflicts. When families and he...
This article is concerned with the recent development of court-connected mediation in the context of...