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Bilateral Clubfoot in Nail-Patella Syndrome: A Rare Syndromic Case Successfully Treated with the Ponseti Method. [PDF]
Chhatriwala BF +5 more
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An evaluation of presumed consent legislation in the procurement of organs for transplantation.
Barbara Louise Neades
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Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
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Presumed consent for organ retrieval
Theoretical Medicine, 1984There remains a tremendous shortage of organs for transplantation, and many patients have prolonged waiting periods before receiving a transplant. This occurs in spite of data showing that (1) the general public supports transplantation and organ donation, and (2) a much larger number of donors is potentially available.
A J, Matas, F J, Veith
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Journal of Medical Ethics, 2013
In his precis, James Stacey Taylor sets out his full-blooded Epicureanism, which concludes that “death is not a harm to the person who dies and that persons can neither be harmed nor wronged by events that occur after their deaths.”1 He then considers various topics in bioethics in the light of his Epicureanism, one of which I consider here: presumed ...
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In his precis, James Stacey Taylor sets out his full-blooded Epicureanism, which concludes that “death is not a harm to the person who dies and that persons can neither be harmed nor wronged by events that occur after their deaths.”1 He then considers various topics in bioethics in the light of his Epicureanism, one of which I consider here: presumed ...
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Applied Philosophy, 2011
abstractOpt‐out systems of postmortal organ procurement are often referred to as ‘presumed consent’ systems. A presumption directs us, in a case in which no compelling evidence is available to hold that P, nevertheless to proceed as if P were true, unless there is sufficient evidence that it is false.
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abstractOpt‐out systems of postmortal organ procurement are often referred to as ‘presumed consent’ systems. A presumption directs us, in a case in which no compelling evidence is available to hold that P, nevertheless to proceed as if P were true, unless there is sufficient evidence that it is false.
openaire +2 more sources

