Example sentences of "[prep] [noun] to treatment " in BNC.

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1 The criteria for response to treatment were : HBeAg seroconversion and serum HBV-DNA negativity .
2 Levels of aggression , a highly male-identified characteristic , are usually studied in women by using passive experimental designs , which vary factors such as story content , sex of the other person in the experiment , or order of exposure to treatment .
3 Yes indeed , I mean many argue that in fact a law was n't required , and that the common law , as it 's developed and grown and , for example , in the Quinlan case , says that the withdrawal of treatment , the withholding of consent to treatment , is entirely lawful ; and some might argue that , by giving a law like this , which is rather narrowly drawn , you 've taken away a lot ; in other words , a doctor will feel , this I can do , but the other I ca n't do .
4 If the parental right terminates , it would follow that , apart from the court , the only person competent to consent would be the child and a refusal of consent to treatment would indirectly constitute an effective veto on the treatment itself .
5 The purpose of consent to treatment
6 The wording of subsection ( 1 ) shows quite clearly that it is addressed to the legal purpose of legal effect of consent to treatment , namely , to prevent such treatment constituting in law a trespass to the person , and that it does so by making the consent of a 16- or 17-year-old as effective as if he were ‘ of full age . ’
7 The effect of consent to treatment by the minor or someone else with authority to give it is limited to protecting the medical or dental practitioner from claims for damages for trespass to the person .
8 Nor does a patient who refuses consent in some circumstances necessarily give a true refusal of consent to treatment in any quite different circumstances which may arise : an example is to be found in Werth v. Taylor ( 1991 ) 475 N.W.2d 426 .
9 T. ( Adult : Refusal of Consent to Treatment ) , In re [ 1992 ] 3 W.L.R. 782 , C.A.
10 I do so in the knowledge that the fundamental question appears to have been left open by Lord Donaldson of Lymington M.R. in In re T. ( Adult : Refusal of Consent to Treatment ) [ 1992 ] 3 W.L.R. 782 , and in the knowledge that there is no English authority which is directly in point .
11 In addition to tightening up the compulsory admission and detention procedures , the new Act tries to deal with the difficult issue of consent to treatment .
12 I think they have very little say from the point of diagnosis to treatment of anything .
13 Third , the Mental Health Act Commission has a specific and quite narrow remit to protect the rights of detained patients , to ensure that the provisions of the Mental Health Act of 1983 for consent to treatment are followed , and to investigate individual complaints .
14 With reference to treatment involving the prescribing of other drugs , the majority of respondents expressed concern about the addictive nature of the drugs themselves .
15 Compared with the wealth of information already available in the assessment of untreated tumours , relatively little attention has yet been given to the role of MRI in monitoring tumour behaviour in response to treatment and detecting relapse .
16 For example , soft tissue sarcomas and lymphomatous masses show a reduction in signal on T2 weighted images in response to treatment , and bone tumours may show a mixed response with persistent areas of low signal remaining and areas of high signal developing within the bone marrow .
17 With the exception of patients withdrawn due to deterioration , there were no apparent differences in response to treatment .
18 Clearly , the existence of timber decay is likely to be related to other shortcomings in the condition of the building and these faults may require rectification in addition to treatment of the timber .
19 In addition to treatment with chloride , the firm has stabilised the porosity of the walls and finally applied a fine film to inhibit water penetration .
20 The doctors can recommend treatment A in preference to treatment B. They can also refuse to adopt treatment C on the grounds that it is medically contra-indicated or for some other reason is a treatment which they could not conscientiously administer .
21 The doctors can recommend treatment A in preference to treatment B. They can also refuse to adopt treatment C on the grounds that it is medically contra-indicated or for some other reason is a treatment which they could not conscientiously administer .
22 As a basis for adjustments to treatment results of self monitoring have now been superseded by the glycated haemoglobin concentration or results of fructosamine assays .
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