Results 221 to 230 of about 1,595,917 (265)
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1997
Medicine is, at its center, a moral enterprise grounded in a covenant of trust. This covenant obliges physicians to be competent and to use their competence in the patient's best interests. Physicians, therefore, are both intellectually and morally obliged to act as advocates for the sick wherever their welfare is threatened and for their health at all
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Medicine is, at its center, a moral enterprise grounded in a covenant of trust. This covenant obliges physicians to be competent and to use their competence in the patient's best interests. Physicians, therefore, are both intellectually and morally obliged to act as advocates for the sick wherever their welfare is threatened and for their health at all
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Ethics and interprofessional care
Journal of Interprofessional Care, 2002(2002). Ethics and interprofessional care. Journal of Interprofessional Care: Vol. 16, No. 3, pp. 197-198.
Audrey, Leathard, Susan, McLaren
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Videogames and the Ethics of Care
International Journal of Gaming and Computer-Mediated Simulations, 2011Videogames have the potential to create ethical experiences and encourage ethical reflection. Usually, this potential is understood in the context of the dominant moral theories: utilitarianism and Kantianism. However, it has been argued that a complete moral theory must also include the concept of an ethics of care.
John Murphy, José P. Zagal
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Hastings Center Report
AbstractThis letter responds to “‘Please Baptize My Son’: The Case against Baptizing a Dying, Unconscious Atheist,” by Tate Shepherd and Michael Redinger, and “The Case for Baptizing a Dying, Unconscious Atheist,” by Abram Brummett and Nelson Jones, in the January‐February 2025 issue of the Hastings Center Report.
Bob, Price, Cynthia, Geppert
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AbstractThis letter responds to “‘Please Baptize My Son’: The Case against Baptizing a Dying, Unconscious Atheist,” by Tate Shepherd and Michael Redinger, and “The Case for Baptizing a Dying, Unconscious Atheist,” by Abram Brummett and Nelson Jones, in the January‐February 2025 issue of the Hastings Center Report.
Bob, Price, Cynthia, Geppert
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Hastings Center Report, 2020
AbstractThe writer responds to the book review essay “Caring for People with Disabilities: An Ethics of Respect,” by Kevin Mintz and David Wasserman, in the January‐February 2020 issue of the Hastings Center Report, which discusses her book Learning from My Daughter: The Value and Care of Disabled Minds.
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AbstractThe writer responds to the book review essay “Caring for People with Disabilities: An Ethics of Respect,” by Kevin Mintz and David Wasserman, in the January‐February 2020 issue of the Hastings Center Report, which discusses her book Learning from My Daughter: The Value and Care of Disabled Minds.
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Intensive Care Medicine, 1987
An explanation is provided of the logical steps taken before assigning patients to critical care therapy in a major multidisciplinary intensive care unit of the University of Paris at the Hospital Henri Mondor. The factors considered by the staff in deciding to terminate intensive therapy are also enumerated.
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An explanation is provided of the logical steps taken before assigning patients to critical care therapy in a major multidisciplinary intensive care unit of the University of Paris at the Hospital Henri Mondor. The factors considered by the staff in deciding to terminate intensive therapy are also enumerated.
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Journal of Dental Education, 2006
There are two very different ways of understanding access and care that are at work in contemporary American society. One of these is the understanding that our society's health professions have about access and care as they consider their ethical commitment to respond to patients’ oral health needs. The other is how these matters are understood within
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There are two very different ways of understanding access and care that are at work in contemporary American society. One of these is the understanding that our society's health professions have about access and care as they consider their ethical commitment to respond to patients’ oral health needs. The other is how these matters are understood within
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Nursing Ethics, 1994
Knowledge needed for ethical care must be constructed in the relationship between professional and patient who strive together to understand what meaning the disease factors have within the experience of the individual patient. Three kinds of knowledge are described.
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Knowledge needed for ethical care must be constructed in the relationship between professional and patient who strive together to understand what meaning the disease factors have within the experience of the individual patient. Three kinds of knowledge are described.
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Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 1990
The meanings of caring that emerge from the ethics literature are professional value; personal value; understanding humankind's existence; understanding meaning of values, choices, and priority systems; moral decision making; dignity; worth; healing powers within; being treated as a person; and partners in treatment.
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The meanings of caring that emerge from the ethics literature are professional value; personal value; understanding humankind's existence; understanding meaning of values, choices, and priority systems; moral decision making; dignity; worth; healing powers within; being treated as a person; and partners in treatment.
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Archives of Dermatology, 1996
The ethical foundation on which my medical practice is based was recently shaken by an episode involving the intrusion of managed care into my practice. With the patient's informed consent, I prescribed a medication that I knew would not work.
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The ethical foundation on which my medical practice is based was recently shaken by an episode involving the intrusion of managed care into my practice. With the patient's informed consent, I prescribed a medication that I knew would not work.
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