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Problems with the Doctrine of Consent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2010

Extract

‘Law’ said Mr Justice Windeyer of the High Court of Australia, ‘marches with science, but to the rear, and limping a little’. Nowhere is this limping more apparent than in respect of the attempts to keep up with medical science. The media is full of reports of the use of fetal ova to create new life, of the transplant of animal parts into human bodies, of tests involving the consumption of radioactive materials by human subjects. The law's response to these problems has been notable most often by its absence. To some extent, the failure of the law to come to grips with developments is not entirely its own fault. Sometimes the advances made possible by science can only be forseen by those with a scientific background. At other times, however, the law fails by not being flexible enough to be able to create new categories of legal obligations. It tries instead to pigeon-hole radically new ideas within centuries-old categorisations. As anyone who has had experience with packing a large number of outsized objects into a too small suitcase will tell you, squeezing things into inappropriately shaped containers takes time. This is one of the problems apparent in the doctrine of consent; the area of law which attempts to regulate the provision of medical services by a practitioner to a patient.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 1994

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References

1 In re F [1990] 2 A.C. 1 at 12 per Lord Donaldson (C.A.) and at 73 per Lord Goff.

2 Chatterton v Gerson [1981] Q.B. 432 at 443, Freeman v. The Home Office (No. 2) [1984] Q.B. 524.

3 See Sterberg and Powell, 1983, 878; Harris and Monaco, 1987, 107; and generally D'Arcais and Jarvelle, 1983.