Witherington, Ben, III, 1951- : The message of Jesus : John Dominic Crossan and Ben Witherington III in dialogue / Robert B. Stewart, editor
2013
1
Witherington, Thomas -- Trials, litigation, etc : Lives and exploits of the most noted highwaymen, robbers, and murderers of all nations, drawn from the most authentic sources and brought down to the present time
1840
1
Withers, Bill. : Contemporary Black biography. Volume 61 : profiles from the international Black community / Sara and Tom Pendergast, editors
Withers-Mendes, Elisabeth. : Contemporary Black biography. Volume 64 : profiles from the international Black community / Sara and Tom Pendergast, editors
2008
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Withers, Pam : Something about the author. Volume 182 / Lisa Kumar, project editor
Instructions issued by a physician pertaining to the institution, continuation, or withdrawal of life support measures. The concept includes policies, laws, statutes, decisions, guidelines, and discussions that may affect the issuance of such orders
Instructions issued by a physician pertaining to the institution, continuation, or withdrawal of life support measures. The concept includes policies, laws, statutes, decisions, guidelines, and discussions that may affect the issuance of such orders
Withholding Treatment -- standards. : Withholding and withdrawing life-prolonging medical treatment : guidance for decision making / British Medical Association
Withholding or withdrawal of a particular treatment or treatments, often (but not necessarily) life-prolonging treatment, from a patient or from a research subject as part of a research protocol. The concept is differentiated from REFUSAL TO TREAT, where the emphasis is on the health professional's or health facility's refusal to treat a patient or group of patients when the patient or the patient's representative requests treatment. Withholding of life-prolonging treatment is usually indexed only with EUTHANASIA, PASSIVE, unless the distinction between withholding and withdrawing treatment, or the issue of withholding palliative rather than curative treatment, is discussed