**Summary** Current professional guidelines concerning information and consent for anaesthesia are a fair representation of English law. However, they reject the need for specific, written consent for anaesthesia, a position which is in accordance with other Western jurisdictions. This is understand
โฆ LIBER โฆ
Anaesthesia for ECT
โ Scribed by J. R. Davies
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 276 KB
- Volume
- 54
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2409
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Consent for anaesthesia
โ
S. M. White; T. J. Baldwin
๐
Article
๐
2003
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 147 KB
Consent for anaesthesia
โ
R. Macdonald
๐
Article
๐
2003
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 255 KB
Consent for anaesthesia
โ
M. V. Chapman; A. H. Wolff
๐
Article
๐
2002
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 390 KB
EEG effects of ECT: Implications for rTM
โ
Andrew D. Krystal; Mike West; Raquel Prado; Henry Greenside; Scott Zoldi; Richar
๐
Article
๐
2000
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 73 KB
Anaesthesia for Vascular Surgery
โ
D. G. Thomas
๐
Article
๐
2000
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 70 KB
Ect in late life
โ
Susan Mary Benbow
๐
Article
๐
1991
๐
John Wiley and Sons
๐
English
โ 508 KB
Electroconvulsive therapy is still used widely to treat elderly people, despite all the drugs available today. Pippard and Ellam (1981) found that 62% of courses were given to those over the age of 50 years in their survey of the use of ECT in Great Britain. Thus it is important for old age psychiat