Results 41 to 50 of about 90,557 (209)
The physician’s conscience clause, contained in Article 39 of the Act on the Medical and Dental Professions, gives the possibility of refusing to provide a health service by invoking religious or moral beliefs.
Małgorzata Chudzińska
doaj +1 more source
Liberal Democratic Institutions and the Damages of Political Corruption
This article contributes to the debate concerning the identification of politically relevant cases of corruption in a democracy by sketching the basic traits of an original liberal theory of institutional corruption.
Emanuela Ceva, Maria Paola Ferretti
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Religiously-Motivated Medical Neglect: A Response to Professors Levin, Jacobs, and Arora [PDF]
This Response to Professors Levin, Jacobs, and Arora’s article To Accommodate or Not to Accommodate: (When) Should the State Regulate Religion to Protect the Rights of Children and Third Parties?
Coleman, Doriane Lambelet
core +3 more sources
The IMPACT framework defines six pillars for standardizing AI in drug discovery: Implementation, Methodology, Productivity, Assessment, Collaboration and Translation. It provides a unified structure to improve data quality, reproducibility, benchmarking, interdisciplinary integration, and clinical translation, enabling trustworthy and actionable ...
Amit Gangwal, Antonio Lavecchia
wiley +1 more source
Social attitudes towards the pharmacist's right to conscientious objection – research on the Polish population [PDF]
Introduction: The right to conscientious objection in the pharmacist profession, as in the case of other medical professions, has been the subject of a lively ethical and legal discussion in Poland and abroad for many years.
Anita Majchrowska +4 more
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Germ Panic and Chalice Hygiene in the Church of England, c.1895–1930
The late‐Victorian medical revolution in bacteriology, and growing public awareness of hygienic standards and the danger of disease infection from germs, created alarm about the traditional Christian practice of drinking from a common cup at Holy Communion.
Andrew Atherstone
wiley +1 more source
Knowing Receipt, Equitable Proprietary Rights, and Duties of Due Administration
In Byers v Saudi National Bank (2023) the Supreme Court held that a claimant in knowing receipt must have had a ‘continuing equitable proprietary interest’ in the property received by the defendant. Such an interest is commonly understood to include a right to benefit from the property, yet successful claims in knowing receipt have often been made by ...
Lusina Ho, Charles Mitchell
wiley +1 more source
IntroductionAccess to emergency contraception (EC) and pharmacists’ professional autonomy remain subjects of legal and ethical debate in many healthcare systems. While pharmacists in Poland are increasingly involved in EC provision and pharmaceutical law
Justyna Czekajewska +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Background Freedom of conscience is a core element of human rights respected by most European countries. It allows abortion through the inclusion of a conscience clause, which permits opting out of providing such services.
Valerie Fleming +3 more
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Legislator-Led Legislative Prayer and the Search for Religious Neutrality [PDF]
Leading a group in prayer in a public setting blurs the line between public and private. Such blurring implicates a constitutional tension between the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause. This tension is magnified when the constitutionality
Masrani, Aishwarya
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