Results 231 to 240 of about 2,129,895 (283)
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Ethics and Medical-Ethical Decisions
Critical Care Clinics, 1986This article reviews basic ethical language and presents an ethical decision-making model that is designed to assist ethical decisions in critical care medicine.
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British Journal of Plastic Surgery, 1993
Plastic and reconstructive surgery can, with good justification, be claimed to be the most general surgical speciality. Not only does it serve the neonate to the nonagenarian but even ventures into the correction of foetal deformity. Plastic surgeons treat injuries and diseases of the whole human integument from the sole of the foot to the vertex of ...
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Plastic and reconstructive surgery can, with good justification, be claimed to be the most general surgical speciality. Not only does it serve the neonate to the nonagenarian but even ventures into the correction of foetal deformity. Plastic surgeons treat injuries and diseases of the whole human integument from the sole of the foot to the vertex of ...
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Hastings Center Report, 2010
If you travel through airports, you can't help but notice it. Jodi Picoult's novels are everywhere. From Charlotte to Kansas City to Los Angeles, airport bookstores are consistently stocked with three or four or more of her most recent heavy volumes of fiction.
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If you travel through airports, you can't help but notice it. Jodi Picoult's novels are everywhere. From Charlotte to Kansas City to Los Angeles, airport bookstores are consistently stocked with three or four or more of her most recent heavy volumes of fiction.
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Medical Hypotheses, 1981
Abstract The author discusses recent efforts to define new medical codes of ethics and concludes that such attempts are unnecessary and doomed to fail in a field where progress is extremely unlikely.
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Abstract The author discusses recent efforts to define new medical codes of ethics and concludes that such attempts are unnecessary and doomed to fail in a field where progress is extremely unlikely.
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979
To the Editor.— Almost eight precious pages ofThe Journalwere devoted to a SPECIAL COMMUNICATION by Siegler (239:951, 1978) and an editorial by Pellegrino (239:960,1978) about medical ethics. In addition to assuring dullards or latecomers to the medical scene that Sir William Osier will have few peers in history, the point of these articles seems to ...
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To the Editor.— Almost eight precious pages ofThe Journalwere devoted to a SPECIAL COMMUNICATION by Siegler (239:951, 1978) and an editorial by Pellegrino (239:960,1978) about medical ethics. In addition to assuring dullards or latecomers to the medical scene that Sir William Osier will have few peers in history, the point of these articles seems to ...
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Journal of Medical Ethics, 2018
The first editorial in the Journal of Medical Ethics ( JME ) described an ambition to be a ‘forum for the reasoned discussion of moral issues arising from the provision of medical care’.1 While that statement of intent might seem broad, it is one that has been reaffirmed by successive editors of the journal.2–4 It is an aim that aligns with the mission
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The first editorial in the Journal of Medical Ethics ( JME ) described an ambition to be a ‘forum for the reasoned discussion of moral issues arising from the provision of medical care’.1 While that statement of intent might seem broad, it is one that has been reaffirmed by successive editors of the journal.2–4 It is an aim that aligns with the mission
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Journal of Medical Ethics, 2017
Philosophers and bioethicists are typically sceptical about invocations of dignity in ethical debates. Many believe that dignity is essentially devoid of meaning: either a mere rhetorical gesture used in the absence of good argument or a faddish term for existing values like autonomy and respect.
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Philosophers and bioethicists are typically sceptical about invocations of dignity in ethical debates. Many believe that dignity is essentially devoid of meaning: either a mere rhetorical gesture used in the absence of good argument or a faddish term for existing values like autonomy and respect.
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Nursing Ethics, Physician Ethics, and Medical Ethics
Law, Medicine and Health Care, 1981The term “nursing ethics” is controversial. Some insist that nursing ethics is a unique field posing issues that cannot be understood fully by adapting the professional ethics of physicians. They insist that the term “nursing ethics” connotes the uniqueness of the moral problems that nurses face in the health care setting.On the other hand, others ...
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Gastroenterologia Japonica, 1993
Since ethics is an integral part of practice of medicine, its study should parallel that of study of medicine. It should proceed in an orderly fashion from undergraduate into postgraduate study, starting with an understanding of principal moral values governing medical ethics.
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Since ethics is an integral part of practice of medicine, its study should parallel that of study of medicine. It should proceed in an orderly fashion from undergraduate into postgraduate study, starting with an understanding of principal moral values governing medical ethics.
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Business ethics, medical ethics and economic medicalization
International Journal of Business Governance and Ethics, 2009This paper explores the ethical implications of economic medicalization: where non-medical problems are transformed into medical problems in order to achieve the objective of shareholder wealth maximization. After considering differences between business ethics and medical ethics, economic medicalization arising from corporate marketing strategies is ...
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