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  1.  9
    Incompetent Decisionmakers and Withdrawal of Life-Sustaining Treatment: A Case Study.Lance Lightfoot - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):851-856.
    One of the most challenging and rewarding roles for in-house hospital attorneys is serving as a member of their hospital’s Bioethics Committee. As a member of the Committee, an attorney assists in developing institutional ethics policies and guidelines, and also participates in ethics consultations involving disputes about patient care. Institutions such as the Author’s employer, Texas Children’s Hospital, promote open and honest communications between members of a patient’s health care team and the patient’s parents and family; however, when communications break (...)
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  2.  13
    The Ethical Health Lawyer.Lance Lightfoot - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):851-856.
    One of the most challenging and rewarding roles for in-house hospital attorneys is serving as a member of their hospital’s Bioethics Committee. As a member of the Committee, an attorney assists in developing institutional ethics policies and guidelines, and also participates in ethics consultations involving disputes about patient care. Institutions such as the Author’s employer, Texas Children’s Hospital, promote open and honest communications between members of a patient’s health care team and the patient’s parents and family; however, when communications break (...)
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  3.  6
    The Ethical Health Lawyer.Lance Lightfoot - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):851-856.
    One of the most challenging and rewarding roles for in-house hospital attorneys is serving as a member of their hospital’s Bioethics Committee. As a member of the Committee, an attorney assists in developing institutional ethics policies and guidelines, and also participates in ethics consultations involving disputes about patient care. Institutions such as the Author’s employer, Texas Children’s Hospital, promote open and honest communications between members of a patient’s health care team and the patient’s parents and family; however, when communications break (...)
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