Causation in law and medicine

Bibliographic Information

Causation in law and medicine

edited by Ian Freckelton, Danuta Mendelson

Ashgate : Dartmouth, c2002

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 495-518

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Causation is an issue that is fundamental in both law and medicine, as well as the interface between the two disciplines. It is vital for the resolution of a great many disputes in court concerning personal injuries, medical negligence, criminal law and coronial issues, as well as in the provision of both diagnoses and treatment in medicine. This book offers a vital analysis of issues such as causation in law and medicine, issues of causal responsibility, agency and harm in criminal law, causation in forensic medicine, scientific and statistical approaches to causation, proof of cause, influence and effect, and causal responsibility in tort law. Including contributions from a number of distinguished doctors, lawyers and scientists, it will be of great interest and value to academics and practitioners alike.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: The Concept of Causation in Law, Medicine and Science: Principles and values underlying the concept of causation in law, Antony Honore
  • Scientific and legal approaches to causation, Jane Stapleton
  • The cause of disease and illness: medical views and uncertainties, Peter Greenberg
  • Aspects of causation in Hippocratic medicine and Roman law of delict, Danuta Mendelson
  • Rebels without a cause?: judges, medical and scientific evidence and the uses of causation, Gary Edmond and David Mercer. The Concept of Justice and Causal Responsibility in Tort Law: Legal rules governing the requirement of causation in tort law, Ian Callinan
  • Fault, causation and responsibility: is tort law just an instrument of corrective justice?, Keith Mason
  • Loss of chance, Harold Luntz
  • Causality and spinal pain: the problem of back pain, Dennis Smith. Issues of Causal Responsibility, Agency and Harm in Criminal Law: Principles of causation in criminal law, David Lanham
  • Death causation in palliative medicine, Michael Ashby
  • Euthanasia and the criminal law: what will sever a causal link?, David Malcolm
  • Issues of medical and legal causation relating to Alzheimer's disease, Robert Helme and Danuta Mendelson. Causation in Forensic Medicine and Coronial Law: Cause in forensic pathology: the cause and manner of death, Stephen Cordner
  • Forensic medicine: issues in causation, David Wells
  • Causation in coronial law, Ian Freckelton. Causation, Evidence and Proof in Law and Medicine: Causation in law and psychiatry, Ralph Slovenko
  • Causation in the context of medical practitioners' liability for negligent advice, John Doyle
  • Statistical proof of causation, Eric Magnusson
  • Epilogue: dilemmas in proof of causation, Ian Freckelton
  • Table of cases
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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