Health Law Review - AZ
- Legal and policy frameworks for clinical-grade stem cell banking.
- Rasouli at the Supreme Court of Canada: no end to the end of life debate.
- Moving forward with a clear conscience: a model conscientious objection policy for Canadian Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons.
- Excerpt from 'Physicians with Health Conditions: Law and Policy Reform to Protect the Public and Physician-Patients'.
- Substitute decision-makers in privacy legislation that affects health information in Alberta.
- Food labelling regulation to promote healthy eating.
- The Crown's Right of Recovery Act.
- The rationale for a registry of clinical trials involving human stem cell therapies.
- Research participants' rights to access information about themselves held by public research institutions.
- Reflections on the value of systems models for regulation of medical research and product development.
- College of Physicians & Surgeons of Alberta response to the Health Law Institute report.
- Ethical challenges and evolving practices in research on ethics in health research.
- Using food and beverage price interventions to address obesity.
- The impact (or lack of impact) of Cuthbertson v. Rasouli on end-of-life medical decision making in Alberta.
- Personal inviolability and public health care: Chaoulli v. Quebec.
- The science of nutrigenomics.
- Comment in response to the Draft Model Conscientious Objection Policy.
- Research with blood donated to blood banking organizations.
- A brief review on informed consent laws in China.
- Overcrowding in prisons: a health risk in need of (re)consideration.
- Funding in vitro fertilization: exploring the health and justice implications of Quebec's policy.
- Regulating consent to human embryo research: a critique of Health Canada's proposal.
- Media representations of genetic discoveries: hype in the headlines?
- Hopeful result, unclear implications: a comment on Canada (Attorney General) v. PHS Community Services Society.
- Comment in response to the Draft Model Conscientious Objection Policy.
- Comment: Cilinger C. Centre Hospitalier de Chicoutimi.
- Consent to embryo donation for human embryonic stem cell research.
- Research ethics broadly writ: beyond REB review.
- Research ethics in 2020: strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
- The governance of research integrity in Canada.
- Nanotechnology - a lot of hype over almost nothing?
- The governance of research integrity in Canada.
- Sharks and the culinary clash of culture and conservation: why are we not considering the health consequences of shark consumption?
- Physician health and impairment in Australia: unsettled times.
- Learning to swim with salmon: pilot evaluation of journalism as a method to create information for public engagement.
- Public health law and ethics: lessons from SARS and quarantine.
- The ruse and the reality of nanotechnology.
- Alberta's community treatment order legislation and implementation: the first 18 months in review.
- Introduction.
- Alberta's community treatment orders: Canadian and international comparisons.
- A new perspective on research ethics.
- The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities: beginning to examine the implications for Canadian lawyers' professional responsibilities.
- A guide to the perplexed: how to navigate conflicting research ethics policies.
- "What have I got to lose?": An analysis of stem cell therapy patients' blogs.
- When is a custodian not a custodian?
- From stakeholders to shareholders: engaging consumers in health research.
- Media portrayal of conflicts of interest in herbal remedy clinical trials.
- Developing a national newborn screening strategy for Canada.
- Governance and stem cell research: towards the clinic.
- Mental health in federal corrections: reflections and future directions.
- The regulation of conflicts of interest in the Canadian stem cell research environment.
- Stem cell research, publics' and stakeholder views.
- Staking the public trust on newborn dried blood spot retention: how the Beleno and Bearder decisions may impact Canadian newborn metabolic screening processes.
- Oversight of stem cell research in Canada: protecting the rights, health, and safety of embryo donors.
- Regulating nutrigenetic tests: an international comparative analysis.
- Media representations of allergy and asthma issues, policy and research: views from the AllerGen research community.
- Everything you want to know about changes to the Mental Health Act in Alberta.
- From code to policy statement: creating Canadian policy for ethical research involving humans.
- Fact or fashion? Alberta adopts the community treatment order.
- Disclosure of physician health information: seeking the right balance between confidentiality and public safety.
- Silence may not be golden: a review of health professionals' statutory obligations to report unfit drivers.
- Alberta's patient charter: is it a course worth charting?
- Healing, not squealing: recent amendments to Alberta's Health Information Act.
- Field notes.
- Criminalizing HIV transmission and exposure in Canada: a public health evaluation.
- Biotechnology and science in video games: a destructive portrayal?
- Donate a definition.
- Alberta's new organ and tissue donation law: the Human Tissue and Organ Donation Act.
- Would presuming consent to organ donation gain us anything but trouble?
- Ethical issues in resolving the organ shortage: the views of recent immigrants and healthcare professionals.
- Federal regulation of REB review of clinical trials: a modest but easy step towards an accountable REB review structure in Canada.
- Is research in Canada limited to "surplus" embryos?
- Systemic accountability through tort claims against health regions.
- Specific health care decisions under Alberta's Adult Guardianship and Trusteeship Act.
- Canadian legal oversight of pharmacogenomics and nutrigenomics.
- The regulation of nutrigenetic testing: a role for civil society organisations?
- Much ado about something: insights into the science communication process.
- Nutrigenomics, mass media and commercialization pressures.
- An empirical analysis of the legal frameworks governing genetic services labs in Canadian provinces.
- Cost recovery and the future of the medical device regulation program in Canada.
- Decision-making processes regarding cancer technologies: a review.
- Civil commitment and the "unsuitable" voluntary patient.
- Mental Health and Canadian Society: Historical Perspectives.
- Field notes.
- Genomics and intellectual property: considering alternatives to traditional patenting.
- Novel platforms for genetic analysis: an assessment of rapid, portable diagnostic devices.
- Research governance lessons from the National Placebo Initiative.
- The Mental Health Act and the Adult Guardianship and Trusteeship Act: working together to protect the rights of Albertans.
- Nutrigenomics, popular representations and the reification of "race"?
- Informing governance through evidence-based research on REBs: challenges and opportunities.
- Intellectual property and nutrigenomics.
- Challenges to ethics review in health research.
- Minimal risk and large-scale biobank and cohort research.
- Introduction.
- Ethics review of multi-centre trials: where do we stand?
- Pay-for-performance reimbursement in health care: chasing cost control and increased quality through "new and improved" payment incentives.
- The origins of and economic momentum behind "pay for performance" reimbursement.
- Research ethics boards and challenges for public participation.
- Public meets private: challenges for informed consent and umbilical cord blood banking in Canada.
- Examining and understanding the need for Canadian Research Ethics Board (REB) Member Standardized Education: governance views from the field.
- Chaoulli, critical theory and Charter rights.
- Public health protection and drinking water quality on First Nation reserves: considering the new federal regulatory proposal.
- Public health information, federalism, and politics.
- Assessing a public health justification for reducing whale consumption in northern Canada.
- Legal issues in disease outbreaks: judicial review of public health powers.
- Exploiting the fiduciary relationship: the physician as information intermediary in assisted human reproduction.
- Preventing pandemonium: pandemic preparedness planning and communicable disease outbreak management in a university setting.
- Canada's obligations to global public health security under the revised International Health Regulations.
- Nanotechnology: facts and fictions.
- The long arm of administrative law: applying administrative law principles to research ethics boards.
- Consent revisited: points to consider.
- Final project report: results of a CIHR-funded project examining legal issues in infectious disease response and control.
- A note on the economic rationale for regulating health claims on functional foods and nutraceuticals: the case of Canada.
- Ethics review of multi-centre clinical trials in Canada.
- Functional foods and intellectual property rights: the importance of an integrated approach.
- Evidence-based practice of research ethics review?
- A cultural understanding of research ethics governance.
- Spare embryos and stem cell research: consent issues.
- Field notes.
- Merchants in the temple? The implications of the NAFTA and GATS for Canada's health care system.
- Research governance, bio-politics and political will: recent lessons from Newfoundland and Labrador.
- Paying research subjects: historical considerations.
- Professional responsibility and the protection of human subjects of research in Canada.
- Concept and putative application of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics.
- "To become old is to become institutionalized and imprisoned": comparing regulatory frameworks for the use of restraints in long-term care facilities.
- Research ethics across the 49th parallel: the potential value of pilot testing "equivalent protections" in Canadian research institutions.
- Field notes.
- The Australian policy debate about human embryonic stem cell research.
- The imperative to treat: the South African State's Constitutional obligations to provide antiretroviral medicines.
- Section 7 of the Charter: a constitutional right to health care? Don't hold your breath.
- Contrasting modes of governance for the protection of humans and animals in Canada: lessons for reform.
- Federalism and public health law in Canada: opportunities and unanswered questions.
- Trends in collection, use and disclosure of personal information in contemporary health research: challenges for research governance.
- Consistency and privacy: do these legal principles mandate gamete donor anonymity?
- The constitutionality of mandatory reporting of gunshot wounds legislation.
- It's not (just) about privacy: a new perspective on health databases.
- Ghost of a chance: Gregg v. Scott in the House of Lords.
- Current developments in New Zealand health law.
- Gene meets machine: intellectual property issues in bioinformatics.
- BiDil, clinical trials and the popular press: an exploration of newspaper coverage.
- Regulating a revolution: the extent of reproductive rights in Canada.
- Legal protections of electronic health records: issues of consent and security.
- A voluntary privacy standard for health services and policy research: legal, ethical and social policy issues in the Canadian context.
- Special issue: Canadian governance for ethical research involving humans.
- Print media coverage on the Lana Dale Lewis inquest verdict: exaggerated claims or accurate reporting?
- Direct-to-consumer advertising for prescription drugs in Canada: beyond good or evil.
- Life insurers' access to genetic information: a way out of the stalemate?
- Physicians gaming the system: Modern-Day Robin Hood?
- Pan-Canadian study on variations in research ethics boards' reviews of a research project involving placebo use.
- A prospective look at risk communication in the nanotechnology field.
- Upcoming events.
- Universality and medical necessity: statutory and charter remedies to individual claims to Ontario health insurance funding.
- A review of pressing ethical issues relevant to stem cell transnational research.
- The temporal element of informed consent.
- Solutions follow perceptions: NBIC and the concept of health, medicine, disability and disease.
- Translating ethics into law: duties of care in health research involving humans.
- Submission to Standing Committee on Health Bill 52, Health Information Amendment Act, 2009 April 24, 2009.
- Nanotechnology and the Ethical Conduct of Research Involving Human subjects.
- Ethics in an epidemic: ethical considerations in preparedness planning for pandemic influenza.
- Building a broader nano-network.
- A conversation among friends.
- Teaching law to students in the health care professions.
- The UK model: Setting the standard for embryonic stem cell research?
- Problematic principles: the CMA on public/private health care.
- Field notes.
- Field notes.
- Stem cell terminology: practical, theological and ethical implications.
- The case for publicly funded research on the ethical, environmental, economic, legal and social issues raised by nanoscience and nanotechnology (N[E.sup.3]LS).
- Deference in the public health context.
- Paternalistic or protective? Freedom of expression and direct-to-consumer drug advertising policy in Canada.
- Legal and ethical issues associated with patient recruitment in clinical trials: the case of competitive enrolment.
- Implications of nanotechnology applications: using genetics as a lesson.
- Creating a patent clearinghouse in Canada: a solution to problems of equity and access.
- Kelly v. Lundgard: obligations of physicians in medical legal reports.
- Legal challenges to donor anonimity.
- Beyond an uninformed public? A comparative analysis of survey data concerning patenting and commodification.
- Children and research participation: who makes what decisions.
- Monitoring contracts with industry: why research ethics boards must be involved.
- Breaking the trance? Enabling dissenting views on immortalism.
- Policy Paper released.
- Stem cells, politics and the progress paradigm.
- An evaluation of G[E.sup.3]LS public engagement activities.
- The electronic health record in Canada: the first steps.
- Field notes.
- Police experience with the Health Information Act: the Edmonton Police Service's submissions to the Select Special Health Information Act Review Committee.
- Assessing the science of genetically modified crops: the new frontier of public health policy.
- Kant's antipode: Nietzche's transvaluation of human dignity and its "implications" for biotechnology policy.
- Electronic health records as a threat to privacy.
- Stakeholders and technology: challenges for nanotechnology.
- A spoonful of trust helps the nanotech go down.
- The science of stem cells: some implications for law and policy.
- The realities of implementing health information legislation: the Manitoba experience, 1997-2004.
- Regulating the creation of novel beings.
- Considerations for using genetic material in medical nanotechnology.
- Bill C-13, the Assisted Human Reproduction Act: examining the arguments against a regulatory approach.
- The future of nanomedicine looks promising, but only if we learn from the past.
- Compiling the ethical, legal and social implications of nanotechnology.
- Defining a policy rationale for the criminal regulation of reproductive technologies.
- A constitutional analysis of the proposed ban on non-reproductive human cloning: An unjustified violation of freedom of expression?
- Some thoughts on the economic impacts of assembler-era nanotechnology.