WolfSusan M., “Ethics Committees and Due Process: Nesting Rights in a Community of Caring,”50Maryland Law Rev. (1991) 798, at 807.
2.
See SmithGeorge P.II, “The Ethics of Ethics Committees,”6J. Contemporary Health Law and Policy (1990) 157: “Hospital or Institutional Ethics Committees Are Still in Their Infancy,”id.
3.
See StorchJ.L.GreinerG.G.“Ethics Committees in Canadian Hospitals: Report of the 1989 Survey” Winter 1990Forum 3.
4.
See DickensB.M., “Ethics Committees and Transplantation Decisions”3Transplantation/Implantation Today (Sept. 1986) 11.
5.
WolfSusan M., note 1 above.
6.
Reported in McCormickB., “Right-To-Die-Dilemma,”American Medical News, 11 November 1991, p. 3.
7.
See FleetwoodJ.E.ArnoldR.M.BaronR.J., “Giving Answers or Raising Questions? The Problematic Role of Institutional Ethics Committees,”15J. Medical Ethics (1989) 137.
8.
See Wolf, note 1 above at 832.
9.
CohenC.B., “Ethics Committees: Is Case Consultation in Retreat?”18(5) Hastings Center Report (1988) 23.
10.
See ThompsonD.F., “Hospital Ethics,”1Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics (1991) 203.
11.
GuttmanR.D., “Facing Organ Allocation Issues: An Insider's View from the New World,” in LandW.DossetorJ.B. (eds.), Organ Replacement Therapy: Ethics. Justice and Commerce (Springer-Verlag: Berlin, 1991) at 410.
12.
See ThielG., “Excuses of Nephrologists Not to Transplant,”id. at 353.
13.
See GuttmanR.D., note 11 above.
14.
See de CharroF.T.AkveldJ.E.M.HessingD.J., “Donor Recruitment…a Presumed Consent and a Required Request System,” in LandW.DossetorJ.B., note 11 above at 184.
15.
See ArnasonW.B., “Directed Donation: The Relevance of Race,”21(6) Hastings Center Report (1991) 13.
16.
See CullenderC.O., “Organ Donation in Blacks: A Community Approach,”21Transplantation Proceedings (1987) 1551.
17.
See notes 15 and 16 above.
18.
See “Marissa and Alyssa—New Names in Transplantation Frontiers,”7(4) Hospital Ethics (Am. Hosp. Assn.) (1991) 13.
19.
See DaarA.S., “Rewarded Gifting and Rampant Commercialism in Perspective: Is There a Difference?” in LandW.DossetorJ.B., note 11 above at 181.
20.
See DossetorJ.B., “Principles Used in Organ Allocation,”id. at 393.
21.
See e.g., the Americans with Disabilities Act, P.L. 101–336, 104 Stat. 327 (1990) and ParmetW.F., “Discrimination and Disability: The Challenges of the ADA,”18Law, Medicine & Health Cure (1990) 331.
22.
See JellinekE.M., The Disease Concept of Alcoholism (Hillhouse: New Brunswick, NJ, 1960).
23.
See “Preventing Alcohol Problems: The Challenge for Medical Education—Proceedings of a National Conference,”Dept. of Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, 1989.
24.
See e.g. CohenL.R., “Increasing the Supply of Transplant Organs: The Virtues of a Futures Market,”58George Washington Law Rev. (1989) 1.