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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law
Workmen's Compensation - Occupational Diseases - Radiation Injury Amendment, Vance A. Fisher S.Ed.
Workmen's Compensation - Occupational Diseases - Radiation Injury Amendment, Vance A. Fisher S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
The Kansas Workmen's Compensation Act has recently been amended to take more complete account of the complex nature of injuries which might arise through the increased use of radioactive materials and ionizing radiation. The effect of the amendment is twofold. First, it makes more inclusive the definition of radiation injury as an occupational disease by treating "exposure to ionizing radiation" as a cause of compensable injury. Second, it removes all time limitation periods with regard to the giving of notice and the filing of claims and extends the general limitation period from one year from the date of disablement or …
Lawyers' Medical Cyclopedia Of Personal Injuries And Allied Specialties, Edited By Charles J. Frankel, J. W. Holloway, Jr., Paul E. Mcmaster, Kenneth R. Redden, Frederick P. Bamberger
Lawyers' Medical Cyclopedia Of Personal Injuries And Allied Specialties, Edited By Charles J. Frankel, J. W. Holloway, Jr., Paul E. Mcmaster, Kenneth R. Redden, Frederick P. Bamberger
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Privileged Communications Between Physician And Patient, By Clinton Dewitt, Austin V. Clifford
Privileged Communications Between Physician And Patient, By Clinton Dewitt, Austin V. Clifford
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Commitment Of The Mentally Ill: Problems Of Law And Policy, Hugh Alan Ross
Commitment Of The Mentally Ill: Problems Of Law And Policy, Hugh Alan Ross
Michigan Law Review
A number of recent events makes it timely to reconsider certain aspects of the relation between psychiatry and the law. In the past decade, both the public and the legal profession have been increasingly concerned with the impact of mental illness on the law. In 1952, an outstanding text, Psychiatry and The Law, was published as the joint effort of a lawyer and a psychiatrist. Two years later the Durham case laid down a new test of insanity in criminal cases, rejecting the M'Naghten rule. Interest in the case resulted in a host of law review articles, symposiums, and …
Mental Illness And The Law Of Contracts, Robert M. Brucken S.Ed., David L. Genger S.Ed., Denis T. Rice S.Ed., Mark Shaevsky S.Ed., William R. Slye S.Ed., Robert P. Volpe S.Ed.
Mental Illness And The Law Of Contracts, Robert M. Brucken S.Ed., David L. Genger S.Ed., Denis T. Rice S.Ed., Mark Shaevsky S.Ed., William R. Slye S.Ed., Robert P. Volpe S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
The traditional and most important problem relative to mental illness and the contract is the situation created when mental illness exists at the time of agreement (the problem of contractual capacity). One principal result of mental illness at this time may be the avoidance of the contract by the mentally ill person. Since case law in this area is extensive, the major portion of the study is concerned with this problem (parts II, III and IV) and the effects of such incapacity throughout the remaining course of the contract. Mental illness occurring after agreement and at the time of performance …
Macdonald: Psychiatry And The Criminal, Raymond L. Carol
Macdonald: Psychiatry And The Criminal, Raymond L. Carol
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Psychiatry and the Criminal By John M. MacDonald.
A.I.D.- An Heir Of Controversy, Charles E. Rice
A.I.D.- An Heir Of Controversy, Charles E. Rice
Journal Articles
What is this thing called artificial insemination? Is it a menace to society? Or is it a fantasy of little moment beyond the precincts of 1984 and the "Brave New World"? Or does the fact lie somewhere in between? Whatever your view, you can readily bolster your position by citing respectable authority. For example, a respected advocate declaims that, "Nothing in modem times has so seriously challenged the basic concept of our society founded as it is on the biological tripod of father, mother and child which we call the family unit." Oppositely, a competent man of medicine notes that, …
Doctor, Lawyer, And Hosptial Administrator: A New Triangle, Howard L. Oleck
Doctor, Lawyer, And Hosptial Administrator: A New Triangle, Howard L. Oleck
Cleveland State Law Review
Hospitals are deeply invovled in the great majority of medicolegal case problems. Yet surprisingly little attention has been given to the relation of the hospital to doctor lawyer-patient situations as a factor in itself. Most discussions of hospitals and law deal generally with hospital liability for negligence of hospital agents-as though the hospital were a monolithic entity in itself. Lawyers seldom look further into the relation of the doctor to the hospital administration and vice versa; deeming this to be a matter of small concern to them. Doctors, of course, know well the importance of hospital politics and procedures to …
Medicolegal Aspects Of Alcoholism, Naoma Lee Stewart
Medicolegal Aspects Of Alcoholism, Naoma Lee Stewart
Cleveland State Law Review
Since the passage of three centuries has seen the explanation for excessive drinking progress from a vice to a disease, it is pertinent to have a brief study of the recent findings about alcoholism in order to compare these newer medical concepts with some of the legal principles on drunkenness which have been long and firmly established in the law.
Medical Aspects Of Chemical Tests For Intoxication, Philip Jones
Medical Aspects Of Chemical Tests For Intoxication, Philip Jones
Cleveland State Law Review
Three chemical tests are most frequently used. These are the estimation of the alcohol content of the (1) blood, (2) urine, and (3) breath. Each of these shows a reasonably accurate estimation of the degree of intoxication provided certain precautions are observed. Unfortunately, under some circumstances the results of these tests may be misleading and be invalid in evidence. In order to appreciate these limitations it is necessary to understand the physiology of the absorption and excretion of alcohol in the body.
Paternity And Prolonged Pregnancy, Irwin N. Perr
Paternity And Prolonged Pregnancy, Irwin N. Perr
Cleveland State Law Review
The question of paternity and prolonged pregnancy is a subject not only of great professional interest to lawyers and physicians, but is one that all of us find sometimes intriguing, sometimes humorous, and sometimes tragic.
Physician's Use Of Hospital Facilities: Right Or Privilege, Jewel Hammond Mack
Physician's Use Of Hospital Facilities: Right Or Privilege, Jewel Hammond Mack
Cleveland State Law Review
The issue is clear: Do the hospitals exist primarily as corporations (business entities), of primary concern only as "private preserves" governed solely as their administrators wish?Or do the hospitals exist primarily as facilities for medical aid to the public; as instrumentalities for physicians to use in aiding the public? Put otherwise, the issue is: Do doctors exist for the convenience of hospitals, or hospitals for the convenience of doctors? Should public interests or hospital management interests come first?The answers are obvious. The law as it is now is contrary to the public's interests.
Surgery Of Major Blood Vessels: Standards Of Care, Victor G. Dewolfe
Surgery Of Major Blood Vessels: Standards Of Care, Victor G. Dewolfe
Cleveland State Law Review
This article presents a "technical standards of care." approach to the question of malpractice. The article describes a common disease, its symptoms and proper diagnosis, proper methods of treatment and surgery, and the probable results. The footnotes give briefly the various aspects of liability of the physician for malpractice, which liability may arise due to mistakes, negligence or unexpected occurrences in this type of treatment.
Non-Profit Hospital Service Plans, Leo A. Simpson
Non-Profit Hospital Service Plans, Leo A. Simpson
Cleveland State Law Review
Hospital service plans fulfill a vital social need. In view of the continuing support and apparently expanding activities of the plans, it is well to understand their legal nature. At the present time problems are arising that could not have been foreseen 25 years ago. The favorable treatment which hospital service plans have received under the law should be continued so long as the plans continue realistically to meet these problems as they have in the past.
Third Party Medicine--A Modern Gordian Knot, Donald D. Harkins
Third Party Medicine--A Modern Gordian Knot, Donald D. Harkins
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.