Description
Book SynopsisThis leading textbook places medical decision-making in its legal context and provides practical guidance on the most ethically challenging cases that face the courts. It explains how the Mental Capacity Act works in practice and how the courts and lawyers wrestle with and resolve problems relating to the very essence of life: what is life? what is an acceptable quality of life? what treatment is so burdensome that it should not be attempted? These questions are posed, not in the abstract but, in real – often desperate, often urgent – situations. This is the essential guide for solicitors, barristers and judges specialising in Court of Protection work, clinical negligence, personal injury and human rights. Postgraduate medical ethics students and academics, NHS bodies and local authority professionals, health professionals and administrators in the NHS and private practice and those in Commonwealth countries with an interest in these topics will also find this book an invaluable resource.
Medical Treatment: Decisions and the Law offers a readily accessible text for those dealing with the provision of medical treatment to those without capacity and related areas, providing a clear description of procedure as well as practical application of the law. Key developments for the
Fourth Edition include: · The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on decision making in the Court of Protection, particularly in relation to end of life decisions and vaccination · New chapters on two controversial issues: “the Right to Die?” and “Access to Healthcare: Choice” · Expanded chapter on Decisions for Children, covering recent high-profile cases such as
Re Gard where continued provision of life sustaining treatment for babies or very young infants was at issue, and addressing the difficult issues around decision making by 16 to 17 year olds · Substantially updated chapter on Going to Court, covering how the incapacitous patient can be supported to participate in decisions about their treatment Discussion of “Escalation of Care” covering matters including NICE guidelines and care pathways and expanded coverage of issues concerning the funding of treatment. This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's Clinical Negligence online service.
Trade ReviewAs an authoritative guide to how the law works, and how to navigate the law in medical treatment decision-making, the guide is unrivalled. -- Alex Ruck Keene * Mental Capacity Law and Policy Blog *
‘It can rightly claim to be the authoritative practitioner text for medical treatment cases…drawing on the very substantial wealth of experience of the authorial team.’ * Alex Ruck-Keene, Court of Protection barrister *
‘A wonderfully user-friendly, quick reference guide…This is a book for practitioners written by practitioners. It is as close to granting the reader a free direct advice-line to counsel as the joint heads of Serjeants’ Inn are ever likely to permit.’ * David Locke in the NLJ *
Table of ContentsPart 1: General Principles 1. Consent – general 2. Consent - adults 3. Deciding for others - adults 4. Consent and deciding for others - children 5. Restraint and deprivation of liberty 6. Going to court 7. Access to healthcare - choice 8. Access to healthcare - funding Part 2: Specific Problems 9. Abortion 10. Sterilisation and contraception 11. Assisted reproduction 12. Pregnancy and childbirth 13. Feeding 14. Religious observance and objections to treatment 15. Withdrawal and withholding of treatment 16. The right to die? 17. Treating suicidal patients 18. The end of life 19. Human organ and tissue donation Appendices