whiplash
Journal of Law and Medicine update: September 2012
By journals team on
This Part of JLM includes a wide range of articles and sections to choose from, for example the range includes misleading health service practitioner representations and health outcomes after whiplash, an argument that male circumcision does prevent HIV infection and ethical psychiatric research in Singapore, the legal status of the fetus in NSW and an argument for legalising voluntary physician- based euthanasia, legal capacity under the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and open disclosure following medical error. Plus much, much more.
Posted in Journal of Law and Medicine (JLM), Update Summaries | Tagged A Pickering, Africa, Anita Smith, Benjamin Capps, Bernadette McSherry, Bioethical issues, book review, Brian J Morris, Catherine A Hankins, childhood obesity, compensation, consent, Danny Sullivan, David C Sokal, David S Rowell, disabilities, Dorte Gyrd-Hansen, Editorial, Edward C Green, Elise Jane Nolan, ethical research, euthanasia, fetus, Gurpreet Rekhi, health service practitioner, HIV, Ian Freckelton, influenze virus, J Pardey, Jake H Waskett, Janette Nankivell, Janice LeBel, Jeffrey Chan, Jeffrey D Klausner, JLM, Joya Banerjee, Julia Werren, K Erasmus, legal capacity, Legal issues, Louis H Pobereskin, Luke B Connelly, Lynne Webber, Malcolm Parker, male circumcision, medical error, medical issues, Medical law reporter, Michelle de Souza, misleading, Natalie M Spearing, Necef Yuksel, Nicole Jefferies, NSW, parental duties of care, preimplantation genetic diagnosis, restraints, Richard G Wamai, Robert C Bailey, Roy G Beran, Saxon Smith, seclusion, Singapore, Siow Ann Chong, Talat Uppal, Tamra Lysaght, Thomas Faunce, Tim Vines, Transport Act 1983 (Vic), United Kingdom, vaccination, vaccines, Vanessa Taylor, VCAT, whiplash | Leave a response