Mason and McCall Smith's Law and Medical Ethics

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2006 - Law - 774 pages
This book continues to provide an overview of the inter-relationship between ethical medical practice and the law. Thus, the emphasis is on those aspects of medical practice that are governed, to a large extent, by the moral law. However, medical law, as a whole, is still a developingdiscipline which is being increasingly shaped by the courts and there is extensive coverage of seminal and recent judicial decisions, with particular attention being given to those which define the limits of professional freedom in the light of the increasing importance attached to personalautonomy. The book incorporates a strong element of comparative medical law, having a particular interest in the shift of influence from other Anglophone jurisdictions to those in Europe. The text is directed in the main to students and practitioners of law, but the overarching importance attached to ethicalprinciples broadens its appeal to all those involved in the control and delivery of modern healthcare.

About the author (2006)


J. Kenyon Mason is Professor (Emeritus) of Forensic Medicine in the University of Edinburgh. He has been an Honorary Fellow teaching and researching medical law and ethics in the Edinburgh Law School since 1985. Graeme T. Laurie is Professor of Medical Jurisprudence at The School which he joined in 1995. In addition to his work in the field of medical law, in which he is an international authority on genetics and the law, he has wide interests in the law of intellectual property and is currently co-director of the Arts and Humanities Research Board Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology Law at the University of Edinburgh.

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