Results 251 to 260 of about 296,201 (295)
Doctors, patients and relationships.
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Boundaries in the Doctor–Patient Relationship
Boundaries in the doctor-patient relationship is an important concept to help health professionals navigate the complex and sometimes difficult experience between patient and doctor where intimacy and power must be balanced in the direction of benefiting patients.
Carol, Nadelson, Malkah T, Notman
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The Doctor-Patient Relationship
Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1983This essay focuses on the doctor-patient relationship as a measure of ethical behavior by the physician. The perspective is derived from commitment as a religious humanist to the Judaic heritage, and experience in hospitals. The ethical responsibility to be competent professionally is presupposed.
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Hospitalists and the Doctor‐Patient Relationship
The Journal of Legal Studies, 2001Hospitalists--physicians whose practice focuses on the care of hospitalized general medicine patients--are increasingly common in the United States, often displacing primary care physicians from this role. While advocates of hospitalists point to evidence of cost reduction and perhaps improved short-run outcomes, critics question whether costs or long ...
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Drugs and the Doctor-Patient Relationship
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1973Hippie communes, pot-smoking in college dormitory rooms, rock festivals, street corner heroin selling, mainlining, and pictures of death from overdose are prominent features of the drug problem today. These represent the most dramatic aspect of a widespread, national and personal problem—drug misuse.
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Compliance and the Doctor-Patient Relationship
Drugs, 1985A review of the literature suggests that patient noncompliance is more often a manifestation of dysfunctional practitioner-patient communication than a result of the patients personality. Noncompliance constitutes a major obstacle to the provision of adequate medical care.
C L, Peck, N J, King
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ETHICS IN THE DOCTOR-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
Critical Care Clinics, 1996For historical reasons, much of the attention to the doctor-patient relationship has been based on the concept of informed consent. The concepts of information and consent are both problematic, and as a result, consent forms and advanced directives often undermine the goal that led to the consent doctrine.
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Transforming doctor-patient relationships
Journal of Health Services Research & Policy, 2007Historians often ponder how books change history. Our Bodies, Ourselves, the enormously popular and influential work, will long be studied for igniting and sustaining a worldwide women’s health movement. It should also be studied for how it transformed doctorpatient relationships and why it is such a trusted source of health information. The book began
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THE DOCTOR-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP IN THE HOME
Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 2000The rapid growth of the geriatric sector of the population has, in part, led to the explosion of the home care industry and the rebirth of the house call. Understanding the population being served is always the first step in providing excellent care.
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Ageism in the doctor—patient relationship
Problems of Social Hygiene Public Health and History of MedicineThe presented work examines the problem of ageism in the doctor-patient relationship, as well as the impact of this discrimination on the quality of medical care and the psychological state of patients. Ageism is defined as bias or discrimination based on age, which can manifest itself in various forms, including underestimation of symptoms in older ...
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