The tool kit, published in August 2007, consists of a series of cards relating to specific areas of consent such as providing treatment to children; consent and research; and obtaining consent for teaching purposes.
Guidelines for doctors asked to perform intimate body searches of people in police custody, prisoners or people suspected by HM Customs and Excise of smuggling drugs or other goods. Joint guidance from the BMA and the Association of Police Surgeons, January 1994; revised April 1999.
BMA views on contemporaneous and advance refusal of treatment, withholding and withdrawing life-prolonging medical treatment, and assisted dying - euthanasia and assisted suicide.
The persistent vegetative state presents particular medical, ethical and legal dilemmas because of the extreme nature of the condition, the difficulties associated with diagnosing it accurately and the risks of premature diagnosis. Current methods of diagnosing PVS cannot be regarded as infallible. In 2003 the Royal College of Physicians issued a useful checklist, and new technologies, including brain-imaging methods, can be helpful.