Decisions to reduce care for patients with severe neurological impairment may raise legal questions. The laws of most states now authorize physicians to stop care for those who have suffered irreversible cessation of all functions of the brain (“brain death”). Where state law is not explicit, it is nevertheless probably lawful to regard brain death as death for legal purposes so long as currently accepted criteria are satisfied. Several courts have ruled that it is lawful to reduce care for patients in vegetative states, but have prescribed differing standards and procedures for implementing such decisions. The issue of whether parents can authorize physicians to reduce care for neurologically impaired children is the focus of current litig...
Laws in Belgium and the Netherlands permit euthanasia and assisted suicide for seriously ill childre...
In December, 1984, New York\u27s Governor Mario Cuomo appointed a twenty-three member commission to ...
Thousands of persons with severe brain injury who are minimally conscious or locked in are wrongly...
The Massachusetts Supreme Court has recently ruled that decisions about withholding care from hopele...
Although death by neurologic criteria (brain death) is legally recognized throughout the United Stat...
What are the legal and ethical implications of continuing to treat a brain dead patient? And may a h...
A major appellate court decision from the United States seriously questions the legal sufficiency of...
Comatose patients may have irrevocably lost all brain function. This condition has been distinguish...
Objective: Considering brain death as legal death plays an important role in both provision of organ...
What is the best way to care for a child with severe neurologic impairment who seems to be dying and...
This Comment will examine present medical and legal standards regarding involuntary passive euthanas...
International audienceTo fulfill their crucial duty of relieving suffering in their patients, physic...
The Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case of Carter versus Canada (2015 SCC 5) concerns the rig...
• At common law, a competent adult can refuse life-sustaining medical treatment, either contemporane...
Since its inception in 1968, the concept of whole-brain death has been contentious, and four decades...
Laws in Belgium and the Netherlands permit euthanasia and assisted suicide for seriously ill childre...
In December, 1984, New York\u27s Governor Mario Cuomo appointed a twenty-three member commission to ...
Thousands of persons with severe brain injury who are minimally conscious or locked in are wrongly...
The Massachusetts Supreme Court has recently ruled that decisions about withholding care from hopele...
Although death by neurologic criteria (brain death) is legally recognized throughout the United Stat...
What are the legal and ethical implications of continuing to treat a brain dead patient? And may a h...
A major appellate court decision from the United States seriously questions the legal sufficiency of...
Comatose patients may have irrevocably lost all brain function. This condition has been distinguish...
Objective: Considering brain death as legal death plays an important role in both provision of organ...
What is the best way to care for a child with severe neurologic impairment who seems to be dying and...
This Comment will examine present medical and legal standards regarding involuntary passive euthanas...
International audienceTo fulfill their crucial duty of relieving suffering in their patients, physic...
The Supreme Court of Canada ruling in the case of Carter versus Canada (2015 SCC 5) concerns the rig...
• At common law, a competent adult can refuse life-sustaining medical treatment, either contemporane...
Since its inception in 1968, the concept of whole-brain death has been contentious, and four decades...
Laws in Belgium and the Netherlands permit euthanasia and assisted suicide for seriously ill childre...
In December, 1984, New York\u27s Governor Mario Cuomo appointed a twenty-three member commission to ...
Thousands of persons with severe brain injury who are minimally conscious or locked in are wrongly...