The authors draw together the disparate scholarly and judicial commentaries on consent to medical treatment to develop a model of the components in the decision-making process regarding consent to or refusal of psychiatric treatment. The components consist of the precondition of voluntariness, the provision of information, the patient\u27s competency and understanding, and, finally, consent or refusal. They offer two models of valid consent: the objective model, which focuses on the congruence or lack of it between the patient and a reasonable person, and the subjective model, which focuses entirely on the patient\u27s actual understanding
The authors used an interviett ’ quesi’iominaire to assess competency to consent to voluntary admiss...
Consent is an integral component of health law and is a requirement for all healthcare treatments. H...
The doctrine of informed consent rests on empirical claims. This is true particularly of what commen...
The aim of this chapter is to go back to the basics on consent to treatment, starting with the right...
Among four basic principles (respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-malfeasance, and justice) which ...
Alasdair Maclean analyses the ethical basis for consent to medical treatment, providing both an exte...
Every diagnostic or therapeutic medical intervention requires a legal basis. This is in most cases i...
A Spanish translation of this publication is available to download under Additional Files below. I...
The doctrine of informed consent has been controversial since its inception. In spite of the profess...
Summary: Hailed by its proponents as a doctrine that promises more equitable doctor-patient relation...
Half a decade ago, the Zinermon court announced the need for clinicians to evaluate the competence o...
This Article examines the importance of patient autonomy and competence in medical decision making a...
The doctrine of informed consent\u27 is intended to get physicians to talk to their patients so that...
The doctrine of informed consent established a distinctive role for both the doctor and the patient,...
Informed consent to medical or surgical treatment, or "permission granted in the knowledge of the po...
The authors used an interviett ’ quesi’iominaire to assess competency to consent to voluntary admiss...
Consent is an integral component of health law and is a requirement for all healthcare treatments. H...
The doctrine of informed consent rests on empirical claims. This is true particularly of what commen...
The aim of this chapter is to go back to the basics on consent to treatment, starting with the right...
Among four basic principles (respect for autonomy, beneficence, non-malfeasance, and justice) which ...
Alasdair Maclean analyses the ethical basis for consent to medical treatment, providing both an exte...
Every diagnostic or therapeutic medical intervention requires a legal basis. This is in most cases i...
A Spanish translation of this publication is available to download under Additional Files below. I...
The doctrine of informed consent has been controversial since its inception. In spite of the profess...
Summary: Hailed by its proponents as a doctrine that promises more equitable doctor-patient relation...
Half a decade ago, the Zinermon court announced the need for clinicians to evaluate the competence o...
This Article examines the importance of patient autonomy and competence in medical decision making a...
The doctrine of informed consent\u27 is intended to get physicians to talk to their patients so that...
The doctrine of informed consent established a distinctive role for both the doctor and the patient,...
Informed consent to medical or surgical treatment, or "permission granted in the knowledge of the po...
The authors used an interviett ’ quesi’iominaire to assess competency to consent to voluntary admiss...
Consent is an integral component of health law and is a requirement for all healthcare treatments. H...
The doctrine of informed consent rests on empirical claims. This is true particularly of what commen...