Restricted accessBook reviewFirst published online 1986-9
Book Reviews: America's Health Care Revolution: Who Lives? Who Dies? Who Pays?,American Medicine: The Power Shift,Health Services in the United States,the U.S. Health Care System: A Look to the 1990s,Handbook of Health Care Risk Management,Health Care Risk Management: Organization and Claims Administration,Medicolegal Aspects of Critical Care,Ethics and Critical Care Medicine,the Mentally Disabled and the Law
See M.B. Kapp, Law, Medicine, and the Terminally Ill: Humanizing Risk Management Advice, Health Care Management Review (in press); M.B. Kapp, Decision-Making in Critical Care: Is the Law an Impediment or a Scapegoat?, Critical Care Medicine 14(3): 247 (1986). But see also C. Bryan-Brown, Editorial: Justice—Seen to Be Done?, Critical Care Medicine 14(3): 257 (1986).
2.
Public Law 99–319, The Protection and Advocacy for Mentally Ill Individuals Act of 1986 (May 23, 1986).
3.
TaylorS., High Court Backs Mentally Ill on Benefits Suits, New York Times (June 3, 1986), at 1.
4.
Bowen v. American Hospital Association, No. 84-1529, decided June 9, 1986 (U.S.L.W. June 10, 1986).
5.
GrossJ., Court Says the Mentally Ill Can Refuse Medication, New York Times (June 11, 1986), at 19.