ABSTRACT

Medical confidentiality is universally recognised as a value worth protecting. However, difficulties arise when confidential medical information becomes relevant in the context of crime prevention and criminal prosecution. Should medical confidentiality be upheld where the physician holds information which is essential for the investigation of a serious crime; for establishing the truth in a criminal trial; for an accused’s defence; or for the prevention of a criminal offence? And according to which criteria should such decisions be made? Based on an examination of different approaches in medical ethics and a comparison of the relevant law of France, Germany, England and Wales and the US, this book analyses how a balance of the competing interests can best be struck.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Ethical Considerations

chapter 3|13 pages

European Law

chapter 4|43 pages

French Law

chapter 5|37 pages

German Law

chapter 8|71 pages

English Law

chapter 7|76 pages

American Law

chapter 8|58 pages

Comparative Conclusions