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31 March 2017 / David Locke
Issue: 7740 / Categories: Features
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The final chance

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The law should not underestimate the desire of terminally ill patients to make a final & important contribution to medical advancement, says David Locke​

  • Why should a properly informed patient not be able to exercise their autonomy to elect for novel medical treatment

There are clearly many occasions when being first is an advantage, but just occasionally it is rather less obviously a benefit. One cannot, for example, easily conceive of how it might feel to be the first person put under anaesthetic to undergo a new experimental surgical procedure. It must be times like that when the benefits of evidence based medicine come into a very stark and individual perspective. After all, isn’t that what evidence-based medicine is when reduced to the personal level: the idea that enough people have already had it done to them so that you can be reasonably sure what the outcome is likely to be for you ?

Nonetheless, someone always has to be first and for every patient who undergoes a new treatment there must be a

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Katten Muchin Rosenman—Charlotte Hill

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Hugh James—Keith Cundall & Lee Hart

Hugh James expands national Serious Injury team with two new Partners

HFW—Rémi Ducloyer

HFW—Rémi Ducloyer

HFW continues Paris office growth with public law Partner hire

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