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Volumn 34, Issue 2, 1995, Pages 421-445
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Recognizing the right of terminally-ill mature minors to refuse life-sustaining medical treatment: the need for legislative guidelines to give full effect to minors' expanded rights.
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NONE
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ADOLESCENT;
AGE;
ARTICLE;
BLOOD TRANSFUSION;
CIVIL RIGHTS;
CRITICAL ILLNESS;
DECISION MAKING;
HUMAN;
IN RE APPLICATION OF LONG ISLAND JEWISH MEDICAL CENTER;
IN RE E.G.;
INFORMED CONSENT;
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS;
JURISPRUDENCE;
JUVENILE;
LEGAL APPROACH;
MENTAL CAPACITY;
NEOPLASM;
PARENTAL CONSENT;
PASSIVE EUTHANASIA;
PATIENT CARE;
PRACTICE GUIDELINE;
PRIVACY;
PROFESSIONAL PATIENT RELATIONSHIP;
RELIGION;
RIGHT TO DIE;
STANDARD;
TERMINALLY ILL PATIENT;
TREATMENT REFUSAL;
UNITED STATES;
IN RE APPLICATION OF LONG ISLAND JEWISH MEDICAL CENTER;
IN RE E.G.;
LEGAL APPROACH;
PROFESSIONAL PATIENT RELATIONSHIP;
ADOLESCENT;
AGE FACTORS;
BLOOD TRANSFUSION;
CHRISTIANITY;
CIVIL RIGHTS;
CRITICAL ILLNESS;
DECISION MAKING;
EUTHANASIA, PASSIVE;
FLORIDA;
GUIDELINES;
HUMANS;
ILLINOIS;
INFORMED CONSENT;
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES;
JUDICIAL ROLE;
JURISPRUDENCE;
MENTAL COMPETENCY;
MINORS;
NEOPLASMS;
PARENTAL CONSENT;
PATIENT CARE;
PRIVACY;
REFERENCE STANDARDS;
RIGHT TO DIE;
TERMINALLY ILL;
THIRD-PARTY CONSENT;
TREATMENT REFUSAL;
UNITED STATES;
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EID: 0029258190
PISSN: 15212262
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: None Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (2)
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References (0)
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