Contents |
PT.1. Introduction: Vision and reality: public perceptions about medicine in the courtroom ; A wider context: the medicalization of courtrooms ; Foundations: methods and goals of the study ; Conclusion ; References and further reading -- Historical background. Gatekeepers to the courts: American coroner and medical examiner systems ; Forensic pathologists in the courtroom ; New developments in forensic science ; Other expert medical evidence: the case of psychiatry ; Medicine and the bureaucratic state ; New medical technology and patient control ; Conclusion ; References and further reading -- Cases: Medicine shapes trials: the doctor as expert in the courtroom ; The law shapes medical practice: court decisions and medicine ; Nonmedical oversight of medical care ; Refusal of treatment ; The law informs public debate: current medicolegal controversies ; Conclusion ; References and further reading -- Impact and legacy: Abortion, expert testimony, and the British parallel to Roe v. Wade ; Euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide (PAS) in other nations ; Medical malpractice in the United States: the problem of obstetrics ; Reproductive cloning and the stem cell debate ; Continuing controversy involving the FDA ; Police powers and communicable diseases ; Conclusion ; References and further reading -- PT.2. Documents. The authority of medical examiners: Jacson v. Rupp (1969) -- The mind of an assassin: the Hinckley case (1981) -- The Quinlan case and the right to die (1976) -- The meaning of informed consent: Canterbury v. Spence (1972) -- The right to refuse treatment: Georgetown College v. Jones (1964) -- The beginning of life and parental rights: Miller v. Columbia/HCA (2000) -- The Supreme Court rules on partial-birth abortions, Stenberg v. Carhart (2000) -- The Baby M case, artificial reproduction, and family law (1988) -- Key people, laws, and concepts -- Chronology -- Table of cases -- Annotated bibliography. |