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Long description: Nach wie vor bestehen Unsicherheiten hinsichtlich der Indikation zivilrechtlicher und öffentlich-rechtlicher „Zwangsunterbringungen“ und Widersprüchlichkeiten in der Rechtsprechung der Obergerichte bezüglich der „Zwangsbehandlung“. Was ist Eigen- und was ist Fremdgefährdung? Aus welchem Grunde darf man welchen Patienten gegen seinen Willen in die Klinik bringen, dort gegen seinen Willen festhalten und darüber hinaus gar gegen seinen Willen behandeln? Nicht nur die Ausgestaltung der Begegnungssituation zwischen Patient, Arzt, Jurist und Öffentlichkeit, sondern auch das Gesetz über die Patientenverfügung vom 29.07.2009 fordern eine schlüssige Übersicht, die diese Problematik aktuell diskutiert und dem Leser in Fragen der Zwangseinweisung und Zwangsbehandlung Sicherheit gibt. Quote: „Ein unverzichtbarer Wegweiser und allen in die Problematik nolens volens Verwickelten nahezu vorbehaltlos zu empfehlen!“
Involuntary treatment. --- Coerced treatment --- Coercive care --- Coercive treatment --- Compulsory treatment --- Enforced treatment --- Forced treatment --- Treatment, Involuntary --- Patients --- Therapeutics --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Legal status, laws, etc.
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Informed consent (Medical law) --- Physicians --- Malpractice --- -Physicians --- -#GBIB:CBMER --- Allopathic doctors --- Doctors --- Doctors of medicine --- MDs (Physicians) --- Medical doctors --- Medical profession --- Medical personnel --- Medicine --- Consent, Informed --- Consent to treatment --- Disclosure, Medical --- Medical disclosure --- Treatment, Consent to --- Consent (Law) --- Medical ethics --- Patient education --- Involuntary treatment --- Patient refusal of treatment --- -Malpractice --- -Informed consent (Medical law) --- #GBIB:CBMER --- Informed consent (Medical law) - Germany (West) --- Physicians - Malpractice - Germany (West)
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Involuntary sterilization --- Eugenics --- Women --- Stérilisation eugénique --- Eugénisme --- Femmes --- History --- Histoire --- -Sterilization, Eugenic --- -National socialism --- Race discrimination --- -Sex discrimination against women --- -#GBIB:CBMER --- Discrimination against women --- Subordination of women --- Women, Discrimination against --- Feminism --- Sex discrimination --- Women's rights --- Male domination (Social structure) --- Bias, Racial --- Discrimination, Racial --- Race bias --- Racial bias --- Racial discrimination --- Discrimination --- Nazism --- Authoritarianism --- Fascism --- Nazis --- Neo-Nazism --- Totalitarianism --- World War, 1939-1945 --- Castration of criminals and defectives --- Compulsory sterilization --- Eugenic sterilization --- Sterilization, Eugenic --- Sterilization of criminals and defectives --- Involuntary treatment --- Sterilization (Birth control) --- Reproductive rights --- Homiculture --- Race improvement --- Euthenics --- Heredity --- -History --- -Causes --- -Eugenics --- Stérilisation eugénique --- Eugénisme --- National socialism --- Sex discrimination against women --- #GBIB:CBMER --- Causes
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Karl Bonhoeffer war einer der bedeutendsten deutschen Neurologen und Psychiater des 20. Jahrhunderts. Sein Sohn, der Theologe Dietrich Bonhoeffer, beteiligte sich in seinen letzten Lebensjahren am Widerstand gegen das NS-Regime und wurde 1945 hingerichtet. Uwe Gerrens untersucht, wie der Mediziner und der Theologe auf das nationalsozialistische Programm der Zwangssterilisation und die so genannte Euthanasie reagierten. Anhand der Quellen wird deutlich, wie der Mediziner Karl Bonhoeffer als Vorsitzender des Deutschen Vereins für Psychiatrie und Klinikleiter in der Charité Verantwortung für seine Patienten übernahm und sich an deren Persönlichkeitsrechten orientierte. Der Theologe Dietrich Bonhoeffer setzte sich in einer dicht geschriebenen "Ethik" mit dieser Problematik auseinander und entwickelte eine Theorie der Verantwortungsethik und der Menschenrechte.
Euthanasia --- -Euthanasia --- -Sterilization, Eugenic --- -Castration of criminals and defectives --- Compulsory sterilization --- Eugenic sterilization --- Sterilization, Eugenic --- Sterilization of criminals and defectives --- Involuntary treatment --- Sterilization (Birth control) --- Eugenics --- Reproductive rights --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Killing, Mercy --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Medical ethics --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- History --- -20th century --- Moral and ethical aspects --- -History --- -Bonhoeffer, Dietrich --- -Bonhoeffer, Karl --- -Views on eugenic sterilization --- Views on euthanasia --- Views on eugenic sterilization --- Involuntary sterilization --- Moral and ethical aspects. --- Bonhoeffer, Karl, --- Bonhoeffer, Dietrich, --- Ethics. --- Castration of criminals and defectives --- Bonhoeffer, D. --- Бонхёффер, Д. --- Bonkhëffer, D. --- Бонхёффер, Дитрих --- Bonkhëffer, Ditrikh --- Bonhēfers, Dītrihs
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In zahlreichen Ländern wird über das Thema "Selbstbestimmung am Ende des Lebens" diskutiert. Dabei gehen die Auffassungen weit auseinander, in welchen Formen die Autonomie Schwerkranker und Sterbender rechtlich abzusichern ist bzw. welche objektiven Grenzen die Rechtsordnung der Selbstbestimmung und Selbstverwirklichung ziehen oder anderen Disziplinen (insbesondere der medizinischen Wissenschaft) überantworten darf. Die hier vorgelegte Dokumentation umfaßt 23 Landesberichte, die diese und weitere (vor allem zivilrechtliche) Fragen der Patientenautonomie am Ende des Lebens aus dem jeweiligen nationalen Blickwinkel aufarbeiten. Die Dokumentation soll dazu beitragen, ausländische Erfahrungen in die Diskussion um die Fortentwicklung des deutschen Rechts einzubringen; sie soll darüber hinaus aber auch den internationalen Diskurs um das rechtliche Umfeld von - im wahrsten Sinne des Wortes - "Lebensentscheidungen" fördern. The topic of "patient autonomy at the end of life" is currently under discussion in various countries. The opinions differ about the legal means of securing the autonomy of fatally ill patients on the one hand and about the limits of selfdetermination on the other hand. This documentation contains 23 country reports presenting a thorough picture of the national regulations in the field of private law to safeguard the autonomy of patients at the end of their life. It was prepared as a contribution to the "63. Deutscher Juristentag 2000" (63rd German lawyers'conference) where (from the German point of view) the question will be discussed whether additional private law regulations are recommendable to safeguard the autonomy of patients at the end of life. The documentation also aims at intensifying the international discourse on the legal aspects of what may - in the utmost sense of the world - be called "life decisions".
Status of persons --- Medical law --- Informed consent (Medical law) --- Right to die --- Terminal care --- Law and legislation. --- levenseinde (einde van het leven, levenseindebeslissing) --- patiëntenrechten (rechten van de patiënt) --- orgaandonatie --- Oostenrijk --- Australië --- België --- Brazilië --- Canada --- Zwitserland --- Duitsland --- Denemarken --- Spanje --- Frankrijk --- Engeland --- Griekenland --- Italië --- Israël --- Japan --- Nederland --- Nieuw-Zeeland --- Portugal --- Korea --- Zweden --- Turkije --- Zuid-Afrika --- fin de vie (décision de fin de vie) --- droits du patient (droits des malades) --- don d'organes --- Autriche --- Australy --- Belgique --- le Brésil --- Suisse --- Allemagne --- Danemark --- Espagne --- France --- Angleterre --- Grèce --- Italie --- Japon --- Pays-Bas --- Nouvelle-Zélande --- la Corée --- Suède --- la Turquie --- l'Afrique du Sud --- Informed consent (Medical law). --- Medical laws and legislation --- Consent, Informed --- Consent to treatment --- Disclosure, Medical --- Medical disclosure --- Treatment, Consent to --- Consent (Law) --- Medical ethics --- Medical personnel --- Patient education --- Involuntary treatment --- Patient refusal of treatment --- Law and legislation --- Malpractice
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Eugénisme --- Political Systems. --- Sterilization, Eugenic --- -Medical ethics --- -Biomedical ethics --- Castration of criminals and defectives --- Compulsory sterilization --- Eugenic sterilization --- Sterilization of criminals and defectives --- Involuntary treatment --- Political System --- System, Political --- Systems, Political --- Euthanasia, Involuntary --- Involuntary Euthanasia --- Mercy Killing --- Killings, Mercy --- Mercy Killings --- -Germany. --- Eugénisme --- Euthanasia --- Involuntary sterilization --- Medical ethics --- National socialism --- Political Systems --- Killing, Mercy --- Right to Die --- Suicide, Assisted --- Bioethical Issues --- Nazism --- Authoritarianism --- Fascism --- Nazis --- Neo-Nazism --- Totalitarianism --- World War, 1939-1945 --- Biomedical ethics --- Clinical ethics --- Ethics, Medical --- Health care ethics --- Medical care --- Medicine --- Bioethics --- Professional ethics --- Nursing ethics --- Social medicine --- Sterilization (Birth control) --- Eugenics --- Reproductive rights --- Assisted death (Euthanasia) --- Assisted dying (Euthanasia) --- Death, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Death, Mercy --- Dying, Assisted (Euthanasia) --- Mercy death --- Mercy killing --- Homicide --- Assisted suicide --- Right to die --- Government policy --- History --- Moral and ethical aspects&delete& --- Causes --- Moral and ethical aspects --- Germany. --- History of Germany and Austria --- anno 1800-1999 --- Euthanasie --- Histoire --- Germany --- 20th century --- Sterilization [Eugenic ]
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Eugenics --- Involuntary sterilization --- Sterilization (Birth control) --- Racism --- National socialism. --- Religious aspects --- Catholic Church. --- 613.94 --- 27 <43> "1933/1945" --- 17.023.33 --- -National socialism --- -Sterilization (Birth control) --- -Sterilization, Eugenic --- -Castration of criminals and defectives --- Compulsory sterilization --- Eugenic sterilization --- Sterilization, Eugenic --- Sterilization of criminals and defectives --- Involuntary treatment --- Reproductive rights --- Sexual sterilization --- Sterilization, Sexual --- Voluntary sterilization --- Contraception --- Generative organs --- Infertility --- Bias, Racial --- Race bias --- Race prejudice --- Racial bias --- Prejudices --- Anti-racism --- Race relations --- Nazism --- Authoritarianism --- Fascism --- Nazis --- Neo-Nazism --- Totalitarianism --- World War, 1939-1945 --- Homiculture --- Race improvement --- Euthenics --- Heredity --- Rassenhygiëne--(hygiëne en gezondheidszorg) --- Kerkgeschiedenis--Duitsland voor 1945 en na 1989--?"1933/1945" --- Biologische doeleinden. Bio-ethiek; bioethiek. Übermensch. Medische deontologie --- -Catholic Church --- Surgery --- Causes --- Catholic Church --- -Church of Rome --- Roman Catholic Church --- Katholische Kirche --- Katolyt︠s︡ʹka t︠s︡erkva --- Römisch-Katholische Kirche --- Römische Kirche --- Ecclesia Catholica --- Eglise catholique --- Eglise catholique-romaine --- Katolicheskai︠a︡ t︠s︡erkovʹ --- Chiesa cattolica --- Iglesia Católica --- Kościół Katolicki --- Katolicki Kościół --- Kościół Rzymskokatolicki --- Nihon Katorikku Kyōkai --- Katholikē Ekklēsia --- Gereja Katolik --- Kenesiyah ha-Ḳatolit --- Kanisa Katoliki --- כנסיה הקתולית --- כנסייה הקתולית --- 가톨릭교 --- 천주교 --- History --- -613.94 --- -Rassenhygiëne--(hygiëne en gezondheidszorg) --- -History --- 17.023.33 Biologische doeleinden. Bio-ethiek; bioethiek. Übermensch. Medische deontologie --- -Eugenics --- -Nazism --- Castration of criminals and defectives --- National socialism --- Religious aspects&delete& --- Church of Rome --- Eugenics - Germany. --- Involuntary sterilization - Germany. --- Sterilization (Birth control) - Religious aspects - Catholic Church. --- Racism - Germany.
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