Abstract
This article seeks to identify a 'problem' in the interaction between medical law and ethics, which is that neither fully appreciates how the other works. In particular, it argues that medical law has not only failed to formulate a consistent conception of the role that medical ethics performs, but it does not adequately differentiate between categories of medical ethics discourse. Consequently, the ethical content of a case, if identified at all, will not be dealt with in a consistent manner. The article further argues that medical ethics does not recognize the power that law gives to it, and that the result is a regulatory vacuum. It then uses the findings of the Bristol Royal Infirmary Report to demonstrate, by analogy, how this may lead to problems