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期刊名:Medical law review

缩写:MED LAW REV

ISSN:0967-0742

e-ISSN:1464-3790

IF/分区:3.1/Q1

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共收录本刊相关文章索引571
Clinical Trial Case Reports Meta-Analysis RCT Review Systematic Review
Classical Article Case Reports Clinical Study Clinical Trial Clinical Trial Protocol Comment Comparative Study Editorial Guideline Letter Meta-Analysis Multicenter Study Observational Study Randomized Controlled Trial Review Systematic Review
Sara A Attinger,Emily Jackson,Isabel Karpin et al. Sara A Attinger et al.
In Australia and the UK, commercialization and corporatization of assisted reproductive technologies have created a marketplace of clinics, products, and services. While this has arguably increased choice for patients, 'choice', shaped by c...
Magdalena Furgalska,Fiona de Londras Magdalena Furgalska
This article adds to the still limited scholarship on the impact of abortion laws and policies on people with disabilities and those with diminished capacity who seek abortion. We argue that neither the legal nor policy framework currently ...
Jaime Lindsey,Chris Danbury Jaime Lindsey
This article analyses the use of mediation to resolve mental capacity law disputes, including those that arise in the healthcare context. It draws on original empirical data, including interviews with lawyers and mediators, and analysis of ...
Sara A Attinger,Ian Kerridge,Cameron Stewart et al. Sara A Attinger et al.
In recent years, concerns about the financial burdens of health care and growing recognition of the relevance of cost to decision making and patient experience have increasingly focused attention on financial 'transparency' and disclosure o...
Aisling M McMahon,Opeyemi I Kolawole Aisling M McMahon
The availability of biomaterials is a key component of health research and the development of new health-technologies (including, diagnostics, medicines, and vaccines). People are often encouraged by biobanks to donate samples altruisticall...
Ruthie Jeanneret,Eliana Close,Jocelyn Downie et al. Ruthie Jeanneret et al.
Medical assistance in dying (MAiD) was legalised federally in Canada after the Supreme Court decision in Carter v Canada (Attorney General) [2015] 1 SCR 331. The federal legislative framework for MAiD was established via Bill C-14 in 2016. ...