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Volumn 11, Issue 2, 2003, Pages 208-236
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Confidence matters: the rise and fall of informational autonomy in medical law.
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Author keywords
[No Author keywords available]
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Indexed keywords
ARTICLE;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
CONFIDENTIALITY;
DATA PROTECTION ACT 1998 (GREAT BRITAIN);
DOCTOR PATIENT RELATION;
EPIDEMIOLOGY;
ETHICS;
HUMAN;
HUMAN EXPERIMENT;
INFORMED CONSENT;
INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION;
LEGAL APPROACH;
LEGAL ASPECT;
MEDICAL ETHICS;
MEDICAL RECORD;
MEDICOLEGAL ASPECT;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
PRIVACY;
PROFESSIONAL STANDARD;
REGISTER;
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR;
STANDARD;
UNITED KINGDOM;
BIOMEDICAL AND BEHAVIORAL RESEARCH;
DATA PROTECTION ACT 1998 (GREAT BRITAIN);
LEGAL APPROACH;
CONFIDENTIALITY;
DISCLOSURE;
DUTY TO WARN;
EPIDEMIOLOGY;
ETHICS COMMITTEES, RESEARCH;
ETHICS, MEDICAL;
GREAT BRITAIN;
HUMANS;
INFORMED CONSENT;
LEGISLATION, MEDICAL;
MEDICAL RECORDS;
NONTHERAPEUTIC HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION;
PERSONAL AUTONOMY;
PHYSICIAN-PATIENT RELATIONS;
PRIVACY;
REGISTRIES;
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY;
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EID: 1842845071
PISSN: 09670742
EISSN: None
Source Type: Journal
DOI: 10.1093/medlaw/11.2.208 Document Type: Article |
Times cited : (27)
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References (0)
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