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  1. The Briggsian Heresy? Should Previously Expressed Wishes Determine Best Interests in Decisions Relating to Withdrawal of Clinically-Assisted Nutrition and Hydration?James Hurford - 2020 - The New Bioethics 26 (3):238-252.
    This paper examines the Court of Protection decision in Briggs v Briggs. It considers whether the approach of the Court, which gave effective decisive weight to a patient’s previously expressed wis...
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  • It is never lawful or ethical to withdraw life-sustaining treatment from patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness.Charles Foster - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (4):265-270.
    In English law there is a strong presumption that life should be maintained. This article contends that this presumption means that it is always unlawful to withdraw life-sustaining treatment from patients in permanent vegetative state and minimally conscious state, and that the reasons for this being the correct legal analysis mean also that such withdrawal will always be ethically unacceptable. There are two reasons for this conclusion. First, the medical uncertainties inherent in the definition and diagnosis of PVS/MCS are such (...)
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  • Children, futility and parental disagreement: The importance of ethical reasoning for clinicians in the paediatric intensive care setting.Chiara Baiocchi & Edmund Horowicz - 2023 - Clinical Ethics 18 (1):26-35.
    The provision of intensive care enables the lives of neonates, infants and children to be sustained or extended in circumstances previously regarded as impossible. However, as well as benefits, such care may confer burdens that resultingly frame continuation of certain interventions as futile, conferring more harm than or any, benefit. Subsequently, clinicians and families in the paediatric intensive care unit are often faced with decisions to withdraw, withhold or limit intensive care in order to act in the best interests of (...)
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