02106nas 2200361 450 99646182880331620230225124855.0(CKB)3230000000017478(NjHacI)993230000000017478(EXLCZ)99323000000001747820230225d2010uuuu uy engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe German banking system lessons from the financial crisis /Felix Hüfner[Place of publication not identified] :Acquisdata, Inc.,[2010]©20101 online resource (24 pages)The German banking system came under pressure during the financial crisis, not least due to its significant exposure to toxic assets which originated in the US. In the short run, the stability of the system has been achieved, in large part through substantial government support measures. However, ensuring adequate capitalization of the banking system remains a major challenge going forward and may require more active government involvement. The underlying causes of the banking sector problems are related to: i. the activities of the Landesbanken which benefitted from government guarantees without a proper business model; ii. weak capitalization and high fragmentation of the whole banking system, possibly related to the particularly rigid three-pillar structure; and iii. deficiencies in banking regulation and supervision. The challenge is to address these three causes in order to raise the long-run stability of the banking system. This paper relates to the 2010 OECD Economic Review of Germany (www.oecd.org/eco/surveys/germany).German Banking SystemThe German Banking SystemBanks and bankingGermanyBanks and banking332.10943Hüfner Felix1324827NjHacINjHaclJOURNAL996461828803316The German banking system3036366UNISA00821nam a22002411i 450099100370008970753620030917105428.0031111s1994 uik|||||||||||||||||eng 0571151604b12463012-39ule_instARCHE-049630ExLDip.to LingueitaA.t.i. Arché s.c.r.l. Pandora Sicilia s.r.l.822.914Stoppard, Tom167746Hapgood /Tom StoppardLondon :Faber and Faber,199477 p. ;19 cm.b1246301202-04-1413-11-03991003700089707536LE012 828.914 STO 1912012000207899le012-E0.00-l- 00000.i1289312213-11-03Hapgood179675UNISALENTOle01213-11-03ma -enguik0103893oam 2200481 450 991079410720332120200803103156.01-000-07952-X0-429-32058-21-000-07944-9(CKB)4100000011340527(MiAaPQ)EBC6260822(OCoLC)1141038152(OCoLC-P)1141038152(FlBoTFG)9780429320583(EXLCZ)99410000001134052720200211h20202021 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierClinical law for clinical practice /Robert WheelerFirst edition.Boca Raton :CRC Press,2020.©20211 online resource (xiv, 148 pages)Includes index.0-367-33559-X 0-367-33563-8 Adults who refuse blood -- Discussing the prospects of cardiopulmonary resuscitation -- What should be disclosed when seeking consent -- Deprivation in Essex -- The first glimpse of a duty to warn? -- Can a patient choose her surgeon? -- Sentiments -- Unwise decisions -- Consulting relatives -- Doctrine of double effect -- Needle phobia -- Candid over complications -- Examining patients with their consent -- Covert treatment -- Can blood be compulsorily administered under the Mental Health Act 1983? -- Genetic confidentiality -- Refusing hospital discharge -- Consent for a cannula -- Changing direction in severe anorexia -- Be informed : then disclose -- Withdrawing treatment in a young man -- The value of going to court -- Articulating best interests -- Loyal Friends -- Apply to court? -- Disclosing the miniscule risk when seeking consent -- Obtaining consent -- Deprivation of Liberty : the story so far -- Falling from hospital property -- Gross negligence manslaughter : perhaps better, "betrayal of trust"? -- Interpretation -- A narrow dispute -- A right to be told? -- "But all life is an experiment" -- Avoid discouraging patients from waiting to be treated -- Mixed messages -- It is for clinicians to identify foreseeable risks -- Separating twins -- Body modification -- Seeking the approval of a court for paternity testing -- Children refusing treatment -- Can we rely on our Advance Decisions? -- Is there a role for "next of kin"? -- Preaching to patients -- Information classification : general -- Deceiving patients -- Determining incapacity -- Reasons for refusing blood? -- Justifying the termination of a pregnancy -- The feasibility of a covert Caesarean section -- Communicating risk : words or numbers? -- Stark compulsion in grave circumstances -- Going to court too soon -- Best interests in the absence of suffering -- Patients value candour -- Informed consent & informed dissent : two sides of a coin? -- Parental consent for their child's deprivation of liberty -- Vulnerable with capacity -- Compulsory treatment for diabetes -- Approving palliation -- Acquiescence : not consent -- Making clinical legal decisions."Clinicians must practice medicine in conformity with regulatory requirements. That is the daily challenge, and those requirements are founded on medical law. This book describes how clinical law has been applied in numerous cases, thus providing a clinical appraisal of the law which is directly applicable to clinical practice in the United Kingdom"--Provided by publisher.Medical laws and legislationUnited KingdomMedical laws and legislation.344.041Wheeler Robert(Consultant neonatal and pediatric surgeon),1555692OCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910794107203321Clinical law for clinical practice3817805UNINA