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- catalog contributor b3930018.
- catalog created "c1992.".
- catalog date "1992".
- catalog date "c1992.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1992.".
- catalog description "10. Monitoring the threat. Declared respect for international standards. The judiciary. Police stations. Prison practice. Medical practice in prisons. Mental health facilities. Conclusion -- 11. Conclusions and recommendations. Recommendations. Involvement of doctors in torture. Provision of medical care to prisoners and torture victims. Treatment of hunger strikers. Doctors working in the armed forces. Support for doctors entering the prison service and armed forces. Strengthening medical ethics. Action by national medical associations. Doctors and the death penalty. Whipping and amputations. The role of forensic medicine. Protection of health professionals. Care for victims of human rights violations. Other issues. Further action. App. 1. BMA activities on human rights issues -- App. 2. Resolutions passed at BMA Annual Representative Meetings -- App. 3. WMA: Declaration of Tokyo --".
- catalog description "App. 4. WMA: Resolution on physician participation in capital punishment -- App. 5. WMA: Declaration in hunger-strikers -- App. 6. WPA: Declaration of Hawaii -- App. 7. WP".
- catalog description "Culturally-determined surgical procedures. Experimentation on prisoners. Trade in human organs -- 8. Doctors as victims of repression. How doctors come to be targeted. Prosecution of opponents of psychiatric abuse: USSR. Arrests in Syria. Civil unrest: El Salvador. Attack on human rights organization: Chile. Arrest of health workers during mass demonstrations: China. Criticism of government health policy: Vietnam. Sudden change in government by coup: Sudan. Humanitarian actions: Turkey. Invasion: Kuwait. Ethnic conflict: Yugoslavia. Killings by opposition movements. The need for international protection -- 9. The response of the medical profession. Resistance to medical involvement. Medical associations: the track record. BMA activities. The World Health Organization. International Associations. The role of other non-governmental organizations. Proposal for an international tribunal. The impossible dilemma -- hero or victim --".
- catalog description "Foreword / Lord Avebury -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Ethical standards and international law. BMA policy. International ethical standards. International humanitarian law. International human rights instruments/law -- 3. Assessing the evidence. Torture: the scale of the problem. Medical involvement in torture. Abuse of psychiatry. Corporal and capital punishments -- 4. Medical involvement in torture. Why do doctors get involved? How do doctors get involved? Assessing the evidence. Examination prior to torture. During torture. After torture. Pressure to assist in human rights violations. Which doctors torture? Investigating medical involvement -- 5. Abuse of psychiatry. Evidence of psychiatric abuse. Changes in Soviet law. Visits of foreign experts, 1989-1991. The rehabilitation process. Other recent reports of psychiatric abuse. Romania. Cuba. Germany. Systematic failures in psychiatric practice. Greece. Japan.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. [223-227] and index.".
- catalog description "United Kingdom -- 6. Judicial penalties: corporal and capital punishment. Corporal punishment. National and international laws diverge. Cultural values and medical involvement. Cultural and religious values and corporal punishments. Capital punishment. Medical participation in capital punishment. Contributing to the investigation phase. Giving evidence in a capital trial. Examining and certifying fitness. Providing medical care to the prisoner. Advising on, supervising or overseeing the punishment. Certifying death -- 7. Hunger strikes and other human rights issues involving prisoners. Hunger strikes and forcible feeding. The UK: evolution of policy. Experiences outside the UK. Forcible medication for non-medical reasons. Withholding medical care. Forcible examination of prisoners. Forcible taking of blood or tissue samples. Asylum seekers. Other abuses in which doctors can participate. Virginity testing. Forcible sterilization.".
- catalog extent "xvii, 234 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Medicine betrayed.".
- catalog identifier "185649103X".
- catalog identifier "1856491048 (pbk.)".
- catalog identifier "9781856491037".
- catalog identifier "9781856491044 (pbk.)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Medicine betrayed.".
- catalog issued "1992".
- catalog issued "c1992.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "London ; Atlantic Highlands, N.J. : Zed Books,".
- catalog relation "Medicine betrayed.".
- catalog subject "174/.2 20".
- catalog subject "1993 A-327".
- catalog subject "Artsen. gtt".
- catalog subject "Ethics, Medical.".
- catalog subject "Human Rights.".
- catalog subject "Human rights.".
- catalog subject "Martelen. gtt".
- catalog subject "Mensenrechten. gtt".
- catalog subject "Physician's Role.".
- catalog subject "Physicians Professional ethics.".
- catalog subject "Political prisoners Medical care Moral and ethical aspects.".
- catalog subject "Politieke gevangenen. gtt".
- catalog subject "Prisoners.".
- catalog subject "Psychiatric ethics.".
- catalog subject "RA1122.8 .M43 1992".
- catalog subject "Torture Moral and ethical aspects.".
- catalog subject "Torture.".
- catalog subject "W 50 M48982 1992".
- catalog tableOfContents "10. Monitoring the threat. Declared respect for international standards. The judiciary. Police stations. Prison practice. Medical practice in prisons. Mental health facilities. Conclusion -- 11. Conclusions and recommendations. Recommendations. Involvement of doctors in torture. Provision of medical care to prisoners and torture victims. Treatment of hunger strikers. Doctors working in the armed forces. Support for doctors entering the prison service and armed forces. Strengthening medical ethics. Action by national medical associations. Doctors and the death penalty. Whipping and amputations. The role of forensic medicine. Protection of health professionals. Care for victims of human rights violations. Other issues. Further action. App. 1. BMA activities on human rights issues -- App. 2. Resolutions passed at BMA Annual Representative Meetings -- App. 3. WMA: Declaration of Tokyo --".
- catalog tableOfContents "App. 4. WMA: Resolution on physician participation in capital punishment -- App. 5. WMA: Declaration in hunger-strikers -- App. 6. WPA: Declaration of Hawaii -- App. 7. WP".
- catalog tableOfContents "Culturally-determined surgical procedures. Experimentation on prisoners. Trade in human organs -- 8. Doctors as victims of repression. How doctors come to be targeted. Prosecution of opponents of psychiatric abuse: USSR. Arrests in Syria. Civil unrest: El Salvador. Attack on human rights organization: Chile. Arrest of health workers during mass demonstrations: China. Criticism of government health policy: Vietnam. Sudden change in government by coup: Sudan. Humanitarian actions: Turkey. Invasion: Kuwait. Ethnic conflict: Yugoslavia. Killings by opposition movements. The need for international protection -- 9. The response of the medical profession. Resistance to medical involvement. Medical associations: the track record. BMA activities. The World Health Organization. International Associations. The role of other non-governmental organizations. Proposal for an international tribunal. The impossible dilemma -- hero or victim --".
- catalog tableOfContents "Foreword / Lord Avebury -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Ethical standards and international law. BMA policy. International ethical standards. International humanitarian law. International human rights instruments/law -- 3. Assessing the evidence. Torture: the scale of the problem. Medical involvement in torture. Abuse of psychiatry. Corporal and capital punishments -- 4. Medical involvement in torture. Why do doctors get involved? How do doctors get involved? Assessing the evidence. Examination prior to torture. During torture. After torture. Pressure to assist in human rights violations. Which doctors torture? Investigating medical involvement -- 5. Abuse of psychiatry. Evidence of psychiatric abuse. Changes in Soviet law. Visits of foreign experts, 1989-1991. The rehabilitation process. Other recent reports of psychiatric abuse. Romania. Cuba. Germany. Systematic failures in psychiatric practice. Greece. Japan.".
- catalog tableOfContents "United Kingdom -- 6. Judicial penalties: corporal and capital punishment. Corporal punishment. National and international laws diverge. Cultural values and medical involvement. Cultural and religious values and corporal punishments. Capital punishment. Medical participation in capital punishment. Contributing to the investigation phase. Giving evidence in a capital trial. Examining and certifying fitness. Providing medical care to the prisoner. Advising on, supervising or overseeing the punishment. Certifying death -- 7. Hunger strikes and other human rights issues involving prisoners. Hunger strikes and forcible feeding. The UK: evolution of policy. Experiences outside the UK. Forcible medication for non-medical reasons. Withholding medical care. Forcible examination of prisoners. Forcible taking of blood or tissue samples. Asylum seekers. Other abuses in which doctors can participate. Virginity testing. Forcible sterilization.".
- catalog title "Medicine betrayed : the participation of doctors in human rights abuses / report of a working party [of the] British Medical Association.".
- catalog type "text".