Thirty years ago, English jurist Patrick Devlin wrote: "Is it
not a pleasant tribute to the medical profession that by and large
it has been able to manage its relations with its patients ...
without the aid of lawyers and law makers."
Medical interventions at the beginnings and the endings of life
have rendered that assessment dated if not defeated.
This book picks up some of the most important of those
developments and reflects on the legal and social consequences of
this metamorphosis over the past ten years, and will be of interest
to students of law, sociology and ethics who want a considered and
critical introduction to, and reflection on, key issues in these
pivotal moments of human life.
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