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INTERPRETATION OF ARTICLE 74 – ZAPATA HERMANOS V HEARTHSIDE BAKING – WHERE NEXT?
Published 2004-01-01“…Supreme Court.”3 In the end the Supreme Court invited the Solicitor General to express the views of the United States in an Amicus Curiae Brief. …”
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INTERPRETATION OF ARTICLE 74 – ZAPATA HERMANOS V HEARTHSIDE BAKING – WHERE NEXT?
Published 2004-01-01“…Supreme Court.”3 In the end the Supreme Court invited the Solicitor General to express the views of the United States in an Amicus Curiae Brief. …”
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Screening for problematic opioid use in the emergency department: Comparison of two screening measures
Published 2024-02-01Get full text
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Dietary Supplements
Published 2015-02-01“…References: • O’Connor, A. New York Attorney General Targets Supplements at Major Retailers. …”
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COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF CRIMINAL CONVICTION
Published 2018-09-01“…Consequences can include loss of civil rights, public benefits, and ineligibility for employment, licenses, and permits. The United States, the 50 states, and their agencies and subdivisions impose collateral consequences - often applicable for life - based on convictions from any jurisdiction. …”
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The Antitrust Implications of Minimum Advertised Pricing: The Case of the U.S. Music Industry
Published 2016-06-01“…In May 2003, without admitting wrongdoing, music distributors and retailers settled with private plaintiffs and the Attorneys General of 43 States a civil suit regarding a conspiracy to inflate or support prices of prerecorded music products through an industry-wide strengthening of the music distributors Minimum Advertised Price (MAP) policies. …”
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The impacts of governing agency: A comparison of resources in the patchwork of medicolegal death investigation systems
Published 2024-01-01“…In the United States, medical examiners and coroners (MECs) fill critical roles within our public health and public safety systems. …”
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Studium práv a profesní uplatnění žen ve vybraných státech Evropy a USA od konce 19. století do 30. let 20. století
Published 2023-01-01“…The first country to allow women to study at university level was the United States of America. In Europe, it has been possible for women to study law at the universities and practise it, particularly as attorneys-at-law, later than in the USA, but with equal success.…”
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Thinking about Judges and Judicial Performance: Perspective of the Public and Court Users
Published 2014-12-01“…<p>Studies of the courts, conducted primarily in the United States, suggest that the way legal professionals think about judging underpins nearly all official evaluations of judicial performance. …”
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POLST
Published 2014-06-01“…It also provides three general options for their end-of-life care: • Comfort measures avoiding transfers to hospitals; • limited interventions of basic medical treatments and transfers to hospitals if indicated but avoiding intensive care; • and full treatment including a transfer to a hospital or intensive care unit. …”
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U.S. Bioethics, Moral Absolutism, and Apolitical Humanitarianism
Published 2020-05-01“…Introduction Dr. Renee C. Fox states that United States bioethics is morally absolute, lacking diversity in our policies and laws. …”
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The Ethical Need for a Fertility Decision-Aid for Transgender Adults of Reproductive Age
Published 2023-02-01“…How Many Adults and Youth Identify as Transgender in the United States? The Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law [2] Moravek M. …”
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Public health and evidence-informed policy-making: The case of a commonly used herbicide
Published 2020-01-01“…"Despite substantial evidence that Roundup weed killer is safe and non-carcinogenic if used properly, a federal judge last week appointed attorney Kenneth Feinberg to oversee court-mandated settlement talks between Bayer AG (the company that owns Roundup’s producer, Monsanto) and plaintiffs who claim that the product caused their non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma." (1). …”
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Limited Access to Research Involving Incarcerated Persons as a Result of Protectionism
Published 2021-03-01“…Rigorous research protections in the United States originated after World War II, during which Nazi attorneys likened unethical experiments on Jewish people and others to practices common in U.S. correctional facilities.[2] With increased public awareness of research abuses in the wake of the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study, Congress appointed a national commission to create guidelines for research involving vulnerable populations, including the incarcerated.[3] Constituted under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (DHEW), the commission produced Report and Recommendations: Research Involving Prisoners (hereinafter the “DHEW Report”).[4] The report recommended that incarcerated people “receive a fair share of the benefits of research,” and encouraged such research to be aimed toward improving “prisoners’ health and/or investigate the causes and effects of incarceration.”[5] These regulations were incorporated into the 1979 Belmont Report and later into the “Common Rule.”[6] However, many groups representing vulnerable or minority populations, such as women’s rights advocacy and AIDS support groups, requested revisions of the DHEW Report to ensure that a “fair share of the benefits of research” was realized for minority populations, whose interests had not been originally considered.[7] This awareness campaign eventually led the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to loosen restrictions on vulnerable groups’ participation in research of more than minimal risk. …”
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Colombia and Medical Tourism
Published 2023-12-01“…(August 17, 2023). https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/Colombia.html (There is a warning that says: “Although Colombia has many elective/cosmetic surgery facilities that are on par with those found in the United States, the quality of care varies widely. …”
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