Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- Preface to the 1997 edition
- Acknowledgments
- About the authors
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Ethical principles for the medical profession
- 2 Ethical and legal responsibilities of medical students
- 3 Communication skills
- 4 Consent and informed decision making
- 5 Confidentiality, privacy and disclosure
- 6 Medical records, reports and certificates
- 7 Negligence, professional liability and adverse events
- 8 The regulation of the medical profession
- 9 Health care complaints systems
- 10 The doctor and sexual boundaries
- 11 Personal health of the doctor: illness and impairment
- 12 Maintenance of professional competence
- 13 Ethics and the allocation of health-care resources
- 14 The Australian health-care system
- 15 The doctor and interprofessional relationships
- 16 Entering and leaving practice and practice management
- 17 Clinical research
- 18 Prescribing and administering drugs
- 19 Diagnosing and certifying death and the role of the coroner
- 20 Births, reproductive technology, family law and child protection
- 21 Termination of pregnancy and related issues
- 22 Withholding or withdrawing treatment in the seriously or terminally ill
- 23 The law and the mentally ill
- 24 The law and courts of law in Australia
- 25 Medico-legal examinations and reports, court procedures and expert evidence
- 26 Other legislation relevant to medical practice
- APPENDIX 1 AMA CODE OF ETHICS – 2004
- Index
Foreword
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- Preface to the 1997 edition
- Acknowledgments
- About the authors
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Ethical principles for the medical profession
- 2 Ethical and legal responsibilities of medical students
- 3 Communication skills
- 4 Consent and informed decision making
- 5 Confidentiality, privacy and disclosure
- 6 Medical records, reports and certificates
- 7 Negligence, professional liability and adverse events
- 8 The regulation of the medical profession
- 9 Health care complaints systems
- 10 The doctor and sexual boundaries
- 11 Personal health of the doctor: illness and impairment
- 12 Maintenance of professional competence
- 13 Ethics and the allocation of health-care resources
- 14 The Australian health-care system
- 15 The doctor and interprofessional relationships
- 16 Entering and leaving practice and practice management
- 17 Clinical research
- 18 Prescribing and administering drugs
- 19 Diagnosing and certifying death and the role of the coroner
- 20 Births, reproductive technology, family law and child protection
- 21 Termination of pregnancy and related issues
- 22 Withholding or withdrawing treatment in the seriously or terminally ill
- 23 The law and the mentally ill
- 24 The law and courts of law in Australia
- 25 Medico-legal examinations and reports, court procedures and expert evidence
- 26 Other legislation relevant to medical practice
- APPENDIX 1 AMA CODE OF ETHICS – 2004
- Index
Summary
This imposing book has grown to full maturity, following its childhood and adolescence as two precursors published respectively in 1994 and 1997. The successive alterations in the title are a reflection of its maturation and growth. Law and Ethics in Medicine for Doctors in Victoria, published in 1994, grew from its conception as an innovative professional practice program, a short course to help young doctors in the transition from hospital training to independent medical practice, developed by three of the authors of the current book, Drs Breen, Cordner and Plueckhahn. It was a concise description of aspects of law and ethics that related to medical practice. They were presented as ‘add ons’ to be accessed and applied when they became necessary. Ethics, Law and Medical Practice, published in 1997, recognised by its title and its emphasis that ethics and law influenced many aspects of medicine and the book integrated these facets more comprehensively into the context of medical practice. The title of the current book, Good Medical Practice: Professionalism, Ethics and Law, gives a clue to its much more ambitious scope. It recognises that good medical practice requires the knowledge and application of law and ethics and that there is a range of additional components that have come to be depicted by the term ‘professionalism’. It is also significant that a fourth author has been added to the three well-qualified authors of the two earlier volumes.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Good Medical PracticeProfessionalism, Ethics and Law, pp. v - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010