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doi:10.1016/j.jflm.2007.08.003    
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Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Ltd and FFLM All rights reserved.

Original Communication

Analysis – What is legal medicine?

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Roy G. Berana, b, Corresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author

aSchool of Medicine, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia

bUniversity of New South Wales, Faculty of Medicine, Strategic Health Evaluators, Suite 5, level 6, 12 Thomas Street, Chatswood, NSW 2067, Australia


Received 30 May 2007; 
revised 23 July 2007; 
accepted 21 August 2007. 
Available online 19 November 2007.

Abstract

Legal medicine addresses the interface between medicine and law in health care. The Australian College of Legal Medicine (ACLM) established itself as the peak body in legal and forensic medicine in Australia. It helped establish the Expert Witness Institute of Australia (EWIA), the legal medicine programme at Griffith University and contributes to government enquiries. Public health, disability assessment, competing priorities of privacy verses notification and determination of fitness for a host of pursuits are aspects of legal medicine. Complementing the EWIA, the ACLM runs training programmes emphasising legal medicine skills additional to clinical practice, advocating clinical relevance. Assessment of athletes’ fitness and ensuring that prohibited substances are not inadvertently prescribed represent a growing area of legal medicine. Ethical consideration of health care should respect legal medicine principles rather than armchair commentary. International conventions must be respected by legal medicine and dictate physicians’ obligations. The NSW courts imposed a duty to provide emergency medical care. Migration and communicable diseases are aspects of legal medicine. Police surgeons provide a face to legal medicine (which incorporates forensic medicine) underpinning its public perception of specialty recognition. Legal medicine deserves its place as a medical specialty in its own right.

Keywords: Specialty; Legal medicine; Assessment; Expert witness; Ethics; Forensic medicine

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Historical background and evolution
3. Patient assessment
4. Expert witnesses
5. Sporting activities
6. Ethics
7. The wider picture and international considerations
8. Forensic and legal medicine
9. Conclusions
References

Corresponding Author Contact InformationTel.: +61 02 9411 4991; fax: +61 02 9411 4991.

 
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