Many children approaching the age of majority struggle with severe and sometimes terminal illnesses. Does such a minor possess a Fourteenth Amendment Due Process right to participate in medical decisions concerning her care, or is her fate left solely in the hands of her parents and the State? This Note examines the health care rights of minors and attempts to give a voice to children, a vast, silent population in this country, in the medical care context. After examining such fundamental cases as Belotti v. Baird, this Note finds numerous exceptions, crafted by the courts over several decades in a variety of contexts, to parental autonomy over minors. This Note uses those exceptions as a springboard for determining when a minor\u27s wishes...
The dilemmas between legal obligations and ethical responsibilities can often create problems in cli...
Infants are unable to make their own decisions or express their own wishes about medical procedures ...
Few people believe that five year olds and fifteen year olds think, act or make decisions in the sam...
Many children approaching the age of majority struggle with severe and sometimes terminal illnesses....
The school nurse cannot give your teenage daughter an aspirin for her headache without your permissi...
This paper examines whether the United States should develop a formal process regulating whether a m...
Health care providers who treat adolescents may also be required to diagnose and treat the reproduct...
This brief will explore the legal topic of the mature minor doctrine, and developmental differences ...
Rare but challenging are those cases in which teenagers, whether for religious or other reasons, ref...
I. Introduction II. Historical Rights of Parents and Modern Infringement by the State … A. Necessity...
In this article, I examine the role of minors’ competence for medical decision-making in abstract mo...
Adults, those over the age of eighteen, are presumed competent and therefore enjoy a certain level o...
Dennis Lindberg came into his aunt’s care when he was in the 4th grade because his parents struggled...
Traditionally, minors are subject to their parents\u27 will when it comes to their own healthcare tr...
There is a longstanding debate surrounding children’s and adolescents participation in their health...
The dilemmas between legal obligations and ethical responsibilities can often create problems in cli...
Infants are unable to make their own decisions or express their own wishes about medical procedures ...
Few people believe that five year olds and fifteen year olds think, act or make decisions in the sam...
Many children approaching the age of majority struggle with severe and sometimes terminal illnesses....
The school nurse cannot give your teenage daughter an aspirin for her headache without your permissi...
This paper examines whether the United States should develop a formal process regulating whether a m...
Health care providers who treat adolescents may also be required to diagnose and treat the reproduct...
This brief will explore the legal topic of the mature minor doctrine, and developmental differences ...
Rare but challenging are those cases in which teenagers, whether for religious or other reasons, ref...
I. Introduction II. Historical Rights of Parents and Modern Infringement by the State … A. Necessity...
In this article, I examine the role of minors’ competence for medical decision-making in abstract mo...
Adults, those over the age of eighteen, are presumed competent and therefore enjoy a certain level o...
Dennis Lindberg came into his aunt’s care when he was in the 4th grade because his parents struggled...
Traditionally, minors are subject to their parents\u27 will when it comes to their own healthcare tr...
There is a longstanding debate surrounding children’s and adolescents participation in their health...
The dilemmas between legal obligations and ethical responsibilities can often create problems in cli...
Infants are unable to make their own decisions or express their own wishes about medical procedures ...
Few people believe that five year olds and fifteen year olds think, act or make decisions in the sam...