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Full-Text Articles in Law
Buyers In The Baby Market: Toward A Transparent Consumerism, Jody L. Madeira, June Carbone
Buyers In The Baby Market: Toward A Transparent Consumerism, Jody L. Madeira, June Carbone
Articles by Maurer Faculty
This Article assesses the forces on the horizon remaking the fertility industry, including greater consolidation in the health care industry, the prospects for expanding (or contracting) insurance coverage, the likely sources of funding for future innovation in the industry, and the impact of globalization and fertility tourism. It concludes that concentration in the American market, in contrast with other medical services, may not necessarily raise prices, and price differentiation may proceed more from fertility tourism than from competition within a single geographic region. The largest challenge may be linking those who would fund innovation, whether innovation that produces new high …
The Process Paradigm: Rethinking Medical Malpractice, Roger B. Dworkin
The Process Paradigm: Rethinking Medical Malpractice, Roger B. Dworkin
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Bioethics? The Law And Biomedical Advance, Roger B. Dworkin
Bioethics? The Law And Biomedical Advance, Roger B. Dworkin
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Getting What We Should From Doctors: Rethinking Patient Autonomy And The Doctor-Patient Relationship, Roger B. Dworkin
Getting What We Should From Doctors: Rethinking Patient Autonomy And The Doctor-Patient Relationship, Roger B. Dworkin
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Global Responsibilities And Bioethics: Reflections On The Council Of Europe's Bioethics Convention, Eibe Riedel
Global Responsibilities And Bioethics: Reflections On The Council Of Europe's Bioethics Convention, Eibe Riedel
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
Changing Attitudes Toward Euthanasia, Alice V. Mehling
Changing Attitudes Toward Euthanasia, Alice V. Mehling
IUSTITIA
Death is a very individual matter which does not readily lend itself to collective decision. Medical ethicists frequently conclude that to allow a person to die from malice is more reprehensible than to help a person to die from mercy. The most striking change which is taking place in consideration of the problem is recognition of the need to reinforce the patient's right to decide on the course of medical treatment.
A New York Times editorial of February 3, 1903 condemned the practice of active euthanasia by comparing it to "practices of savages in all parts of the world". Seventy …