Russell, O.R.: 1977, Freedom to Die: Moral and Legal Aspectsof Euthanasia , Behavioral Publications, New York.Russell, Olive-Ruth, Freedom to Die: Moral and Legal Aspects of Euthanasia, 2. Auflage, NewYork 1977Freedom to die: Moral and legal aspects of euthanasia. Russell,O Ruth. . ...
discontinue Dictionary Thesaurus Medical Acronyms Wikipedia Related to discontinue:entreat,insinuating,encompasses to terminate or abandon an action. Collins Dictionary of Law © W.J. Stewart, 2006 Want to thank TFD for its existence?Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visitthe...
Euthanasia in advanced dementia; the view of the general practitioners in the Netherlands on a vignette case along the juridical and ethical dispute Article Open access 18 November 2021 Online modules to improve health professionals’ end-of-life law knowledge and confidence: a pre-post survey ...
This means preferring and promoting palliative care and pain relief to ensure a comfortable and dignified death, as opposed to euthanasia and assisted suicide, which are practices that violate human dignity and the right to life. To ensure an ethical approach to medicine, it is essential to ...
AVMA Panel on Euthanasia. AVMA Guidelines for the Euthanasia of Animals: 2013 Edition. J. Am. Vet. Med. Assoc. 2013, 8, 1–102. [Google Scholar] Marks, S.L.; Rankin, S.C.; Byrne, B.A.; Wees, J.S. Consensus Statement: Enteropathogenic Bacteria in Dogs and Cats. J. Vet. Int...
Google Share on Facebook Also found in:Dictionary,Thesaurus,Medical,Encyclopedia,Wikipedia. CONSISTENT. That which agrees with something else; as a consistent condition, which is one which agrees with all other parts of a contract, or which can be reconciled with every other part. 1 Bouv. Just...
The legal acceptability of euthanasia and assisted suicide in the Netherlands is based on the legal recognition by the courts, on a case-by-case basis, of the physician's defence of necessity. In order to have this defence accepted the physician who performed euthanasia or assisted with suicide...
This article addresses the question of whether the defence of necessity could be utilised in cases of euthanasia in the medical context. It challenges the application of the doctrine of double effect as a means of ascertaining the physician's primary intent and argues instead that the law should...
At the time of decapitation, perfusion to R’s head and D’s body would be maintained, but their hearts and brains would cease to function, respectively. As such, legal scholar Nita Farahany has stated that “it seems as if active euthanasia could be the most lenient characterization of a...
The most common objections relate to a conflict between the nurse’s religious beliefs and abortion, euthanasia, and patient refusal to accept treatment (Toto-Flores et al. 2017). A recent phenomenological study indicates that nurses themselves view conscience as something that allows them to ...