During the 1960s and 1970s, the individual rights revolution that swept through American society remade much of the nation\u27s health law in its image. Sick people acquired the right to be told of the risks and benefits of proposed treatments and then to give thumbs-up or thumbs-down to their doctors\u27 decisions. Successful suits for medical negligence went from rare to commonplace. Elderly and poor Americans achieved statutory rights of access to publicly funded healthcare, and courts burnished these rights with myriad procedural protections. The critically ill and their families won the right to refuse aggressive, life-sustaining treatments. Psychiatric patients acquired new veto power over hospital confinement and drug therapy, and bi...
This Article examines the persistent American demand for freedom of therapeutic choice as a popular ...
This article explores the very limited cases historically in the twentieth century when human rights...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon declared that the “spiraling costs” of medical care constituted a “...
During the 1960s and 1970s, the individual rights revolution that swept through American society rem...
Abstract Because of budgetary and other political pressures, American health care reform (and other ...
The current crisis in the distribution of health care resources in the U.S. derives largely from ins...
An analysis of the history of constitutional interpretation in the United States reveals that any ri...
When asked to write a chapter on how litigation has advanced a right to health in the U.S., I respon...
By default, the courts are inventing health law. The law governing the American health system arises...
As Western man approaches the last quarter of the twentieth century, he is developing the power to c...
From the Publisher: A comprehensive history of the concept of freedom of therapeutic choice in the U...
Where today is legislative ingenuity lavished more bountiully than on the titles of statutes? And wh...
In one of the most enthusiastically received proposals in his January State of the Union address, Pr...
Western health care systems are currently facing serious scarcity and access issues. These problems ...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
This Article examines the persistent American demand for freedom of therapeutic choice as a popular ...
This article explores the very limited cases historically in the twentieth century when human rights...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon declared that the “spiraling costs” of medical care constituted a “...
During the 1960s and 1970s, the individual rights revolution that swept through American society rem...
Abstract Because of budgetary and other political pressures, American health care reform (and other ...
The current crisis in the distribution of health care resources in the U.S. derives largely from ins...
An analysis of the history of constitutional interpretation in the United States reveals that any ri...
When asked to write a chapter on how litigation has advanced a right to health in the U.S., I respon...
By default, the courts are inventing health law. The law governing the American health system arises...
As Western man approaches the last quarter of the twentieth century, he is developing the power to c...
From the Publisher: A comprehensive history of the concept of freedom of therapeutic choice in the U...
Where today is legislative ingenuity lavished more bountiully than on the titles of statutes? And wh...
In one of the most enthusiastically received proposals in his January State of the Union address, Pr...
Western health care systems are currently facing serious scarcity and access issues. These problems ...
The universal human right to health care is a cliché that is frequently invoked by politicians and v...
This Article examines the persistent American demand for freedom of therapeutic choice as a popular ...
This article explores the very limited cases historically in the twentieth century when human rights...
In 1969, President Richard Nixon declared that the “spiraling costs” of medical care constituted a “...