Reproductive technology and intent-based parenthood: an opportunity for gender neutrality
Liability issues arising out of hospitals' and organ procurement organizations' rejection of valid anatomical gifts: the truth and consequences
Old law meets new medicine: revisiting involuntary psychotropic medication of the criminal defendant
Making decisions for deaf children regarding cochlear implants: the legal ramifications of recognizing deafness as a culture rather than a disability
Pushing the limits of informed consent: Johnson v. Kokemoor and physician-specific disclosure
When health insurers deny coverage for breast reconstructive surgery: gender meets disability
DNA patentability--anything but obvious
The DNA-sequencing blitz, made possible in the early 1980s by improved genetic technology, has descended on the patent office in the form of thousands of patent applications for sequences. Controversy over the obviousness of certain sequences has led to a string of recent cases in the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC). In each of three opinions, the court held that DNA sequences are non-obvious, and therefore patentable. Due to a mysterious aversion by the court to apply the standard analyses for obviousness, coupled with a lack of scientific prowess, the CAFC's decisions lack both legal and technical coherence. Also, due to the time lag between invention, application, and appeal, much of the judicial rationale has been based on a level of technology a decade old--primitive by today's standards. A careful application of the obviousness standard in light of today's technology demonstrates that obviousness may yet pose a threat to biotechnologists.
Arguing the "obvious" in Wisconsin: why state regulation of assisted reproductive technology has not come to pass, and how it should
Federally funding human embryonic stem cell research: an administrative analysis
The constitutionality of parole departments disclosing the HIV status of parolees
Jones v. Gerhardstein: the involuntarily committed mental patient's right to refuse treatment with psychotropic drugs
The question of whether an involuntary committed mental patient has a fundamental right to refuse treatment with psychotropic drugs continues to be a subject of much debate. Over the past twenty-five years, psychotropic drugs have become the most common form of treatment for the mentally ill. For many patients, these drugs provide substantial benefits; for others, however, they produce severe, sometimes debilitating, side effects. Because of the possibility of serious harm to the patient and because of the potential for abuse of drug treatment by psychiatric staffs, the mental health bar generally has argued for increased procedural protection for mental patients. In Jones v. Gerhardstein, the Wisconsin Supreme Court responded to these concerns by requiring that a judicial hearing be held on the issue of a patient's competency to refuse treatment before the attending physician may administer medication without the patient's consent. This Note discusses the controversy between the legal and medical communities over treatment refusal by mentally ill patients in light of the impact of the Jones decision on institutional practice and on refusing patients. The author argues that the strictly rights-based analysis used by the Jones court has done little to benefit involuntarily committed mental patients. The author suggests alternative ways of approaching treatment refusal that might be more responsive to the distinctive needs of the mentally ill.
In re Guardianship of Eberhardy: the sterilization of the mentally retarded