MishkinD.B., “Proffering Bioethicists as Experts,”The Judges' Journal56 (1997): 50–53.
3.
See id.
4.
PellegrinoE.D. and SharpeV.A., “Medical Ethics in the Courtroom: The Need for Scrutiny,”Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 32 (1989): 547–564.
5.
McAllenP.G. and DelgadoR., “Moral Experts in the Courtroom,”Hastings Center Report14, no. 1 (1984): 27–34.
6.
“Children and the Elderly: Who Should Decide?” in BaylisF., eds., Health Care Ethics in Canada (Toronto: Harcourt Brace, 1995): At 279.
7.
RubinS., When Doctors Say No: The Battleground of Medical Futility (Bloomington, Indiana: University Press; 1998): at 47.
8.
FeldmanD., Health and Medicine in the Jewish Tradition (New York: Crossroads Publishing; 1986); “Standards and Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiac Care: Ethical Considerations in Resuscitation”JAMA, 268 (1992): 2282–88; YoungnerS.J.“Who Defines Futility?”JAMA, 260 (1988): 2094.
9.
Youngner, id. at 2094–95.
10.
TomlinsonT.L. and BrodyH., “Ethics and Communication in Do-Not-Resuscitate Orders,”N. Engl. J. Med., 318 (1988): 43–46; Youngner, “Who Defines Futility?”id. at 2094.
11.
BrettA.S. and McCulloughL.B., “When Patients Request Specific Interventions: Defining the Limits of the Physician's Obligation,”N. Engl. J. Med., 315 (1986): 1347–51.
12.
SchneidermanL.J.JeckerN.S. and JonsenA.R., “Medical Futility: Its Meaning and Ethical Implications,”Annals of Internal Medicine15 (1990): 949–54.
13.
Barber v. Superior Court of California, 147 Cal. App. 3d 106, 1017–18, 195 Cal. Rptr. 484 (1983).
14.
SchneidermanJecker and Jonsen, supra note 12, at 950; SchneidermanL.J. and JeckerN.S., Wrong Medicine: Doctors, Patients, and Futile Treatment (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995), 159; ThomasmaD.C., “Beyond Medical Paternalism and Patient Autonomy: A Model of Physician Conscience for the Physician-Patient Relationship,”Annals of Internal Medicine98 (1983): 243–48.
15.
LoB. and JonsenA.R., “Clinical Decisions to Limit Treatment,”Annals of Internal Medicine93 (1980): 764–68; and ParisJ. J.CroneR.K., and ReardonF.E., “Physicians' Refusal of Requested Treatment: The Case of Baby L,”N. Engl. J. Med., 322 (1990): 1012–15.
16.
WolfS., quoted in BelkinL., “As Family Protests, Hospital Seeks An End to Woman's Life Support,”New York Times (1991): A1, A16.
17.
Article 29-B, Statute 413-A, The State of New York Public Health Law, 1988; The New York Task Force on Life and the Law, Do Not Resuscitate Orders.2nd ed.New York, 1986.
18.
JeckerN.S. and PearlmanR.A., “Medical Futility: Who Decides?”Archives of Internal Medicine152 (1992): 1140–1144; 1984 Amendments to the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act, Public Law 98–457, 1984; SchneidermanJecker, and Jonsen, supra note 12, at 950; Schneiderman and Jecker, supra note 14, 17.
19.
SchneidermanJecker, and Jonsen, supra note 12, at 952–53; Schneiderman and Jecker, supra note 14, at 17.
20.
LantosJ.D., “The Illusion of Futility in Clinical Practice,”American Journal of Medicine87 (1989): 81–84; and LoB. and JonsenA.R.“Clinical Decisions to Limit Treatment,”764.
21.
Lo and Jonsen, supra note 15, at 764.
22.
BedellS.E., “Survival after Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in the Hospital,”N. Engl. J. Med., 309 (1983): 569–76; BlackhallL.J., “Must We Always Use CPR?”N. Engl. J. Med., 317 (1987): 1218–84.
23.
TaffetG.E.TeasdaleT.A., and LuchiR.J., “In-Hospital Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation,”JAMA, 260 (1988): 2069–72.
24.
PerkinsH.S., “Ethics at the End of Life: Practical Principles for Making Resuscitation Decisions,”Journal of General Internal Medicine1 (1986): 170–76; RuarkJ.E. and RaffinT.A.“Initiating and Withdrawing Life Support: Principles and Practice in Adult Medicine,”N. Engl. J. Med.318 (1988): 25–30.
25.
JeckerN.S. and PearlmanR.A., “Medical Futility;”SchneidermanJecker, and Jonsen, supra note 12, at 951–52; Youngner, supra note 8, at 2094.
26.
“Joint Statement on Resuscitative Intervention (Update 1995),”Canadian Medical Association Journal153 (1995): 1652A-C.
27.
“MMA Takes Position on Futile Therapy.”Inter-Com (November 1997): 6.
28.
RubinS., When Doctors Say No: The Battleground of Medical Futility, (Bloomington, Indiana: University Press; 1998): at 9.
29.
BaylisF., “Resuscitation of the Terminally Ill: A Response to Buckman and Senn,”Canadian Medical Association Journal141 (1989): 1043.
30.
BenjaminM., Splitting the Difference: Compromise and Integrity in Ethics and Politics, (Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 1990).