If you look closely at personal rights we always have the right to do or not do something physical. We don't pass the right off for someone else to control. The only exceptions are medical and it is well documented why they are exceptions.
If you look closely at personal rights we always have the right to do or not do something physical. We don't pass the right off for someone else to control. The only exceptions are medical and it is well documented why they are exceptions.
The SCC wasn't evaluating a child custody case. Their only job was to rule on consent.
That's why we have DNR tags you can buy so they won't try to save you or these for JoHos:I'll go out on a limb right now and suggest that the next complainant will make an argument that urges that there right to personal security was violated by having no conscious consent. The precedent that they may employ will be the recent SCOC ruling.
Here's a potential medical example... A Jehovah's Witness that can not accept blood transfusions for religious reasons is rushed unconscious to emergency for surgery wherein a blood transfusion is applied.
Tell me that the JW's wouldn't use this SCOC ruling in their favour.
That's why we have DNR tags you can buy so they won't try to save you or these for JoHos:
That is my point, there is no simple way to communicate precisely what is or isn't acceptable. It's only when your conscious that you can convey what's ok and what isn't.
Not to a doctor, who has taken an oath.
Apparently only 10% of JoHo will do that.I guess that all Kreskin has to consider is the legal considerations faced by the doctors relative to preserving life and the religious rights involved.... That and the potential that the JW may decide to renounce their religion in emergency and opt for a transfusion, but alas, they can't provide conscious consent.
No, I don't think you are getting it. I've already posted the actual section of the criminal code they were interpreting. You can't apply an interpretation and ruling on a specific section of the criminal code, to a situation to which it doesn't apply. That is not how the law works.
The provisions applied to sexual assault. That's where they end in their applicability.
Malpractice doesn't cover a surgeon who operates to save an unconscious ER patient....
Apparently only 10% of JoHo will do that.
Read that while searching for the tag.
No there isn't. There's greater chance that the laws and wordings will simply be clarified as to when conscious concent is null and void, and when it isn't.
The tags are for when you are unconscious and can't tell EMS that.Oh and regards to Je-Ho/Witnesses, you don't even need a tag or religious reasons not to refuse medical treatment..... any citizen has the right to refuse medical treatment of any kind.
Side note: Synthetic blood is going through trials and will be out shortly.The tags are for when you are unconscious and can't tell EMS that.
Yes you can, because all it takes is one person to challenge it in court and say "Well if the parameters of this law apply to this situation, then why doesn't it apply to this very similar situation?"
Malpractice and the emergency room
Malpractice and the emergency room - WrongDiagnosis.com
"The ER has a particularly high rate of medical errors, and thus causes a relatively high rate of medical malpractice lawsuits. Two of the highest paying malpractice-related diseases in terms of total awards are heart attack (myocardial infarction) and appendicitis. In both of these cases, the typical allegation is misdiagnosis, delayed diagnosis or mismanagement of medical tests, leading to a late diagnosis and to severe consequences, often death. The other three of the top five malpractice diseases, which are breast cancer, colorectal cancer, and lung cancer, are more common in general practice and involve slower-progressing diseases."
Tell you what.... when I make my way back to Canada and I get into an accident that renders me unconscious, when I wake back up in the ER after an operation, I'll make the first case and sue their ass for doing something I didn't consent to because I was unconscious..... then we'll see what happens.
Oh and regards to Je-Ho/Witnesses, you don't even need a tag or religious reasons not to refuse medical treatment..... any citizen has the right to refuse medical treatment of any kind.
Because the law for the other situation is written differently. Primates can have higher functioning self awareness than a human on life support, yet animal activists have been unsuccessful at arguing that previous court decisions should apply to animals and thus give them more rights...because the laws are different. They don't apply.
So, would you like to tell me how this applies to consent? A doctor does not need your consent in an emergency situation. The court has ruled on this.