Results 231 to 240 of about 330,321 (261)
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Wanted: Morally Courageous Leaders

Frontiers of Health Services Management, 2013
COLE EDMONSON, FACHEThe GREATEST risk of silence is that eventually we become morally blind and deaf to difficult issues that arise in healthcare (Bird 1996). The specter of such a risk calls for highly ethical and moral leadership, especially in a system in desperate need of transformation.
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Where’s our moral courage?

Nursing Standard, 2016
Everyone who works in and uses the NHS had a bitter pill to swallow when prime minister Theresa May retained Jeremy Hunt as health secretary.
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Moral Integrity and Moral Courage: Can You Teach It?

Journal of Nursing Education, 2013
Nursing has been spared the ethical scandal of many other professions, but issues of compromised moral integrity are growing in practice and education. This study was structured to investigate faculty perceptions of the challenges encountered regarding moral integrity in academia and strategies to promote nursing students’ moral integrity ...
Ruth A, Eby   +5 more
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Moral courage in nursing: A concept analysis

Nursing Ethics, 2016
Background: Nursing as an ethical practice requires courage to be moral, taking tough stands for what is right, and living by one’s moral values. Nurses need moral courage in all areas and at all levels of nursing. Along with new interest in virtue ethics in healthcare, interest in moral courage as a virtue and a valued element of human morality has ...
Repo Jamal Hanna   +2 more
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Moral Courage

Journal of Christian Nursing, 2011
Silvia Osswald   +2 more
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Moral courage of nursing: Bibliometric analysis

Nursing Ethics
Background Moral courage is a recognized virtue. Researchers have focused on various aspects of nursing moral courage, such as its conceptualization and influencing factors. Within these studies, various literature reviews have been conducted, but to our knowledge, bibliometric mapping has not been utilized.
Mingtao Huang, Sihua Wei, Jiansen Xia
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Moral Courage Through a Collective Voice

The American Journal of Bioethics, 2008
Courage is being scared to death—and saddling up anyway —John Wayne (quoted in Kidder, 2005, 9) Not long after reading the target article by Cook and Hoas (2008), I could not help but question whet...
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Professional Moral Courage

2015
The desire and decision to be an ethical and moral person needs to be durable—continuously maintained and strengthened. Managers, leaders, and employees at every level of the organization have come to some level of agreement that there is both necessity and value in being ethical in business.
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Moral Courage in the Workplace

Academy of Management Proceedings, 2015
Moral courage is an important element of ethical strength in organizational settings. The topic of moral courage in the workplace has begun to attract increased scholarly attention and it is time t...
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Moral Courage and Facing Others

International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 2012
Abstract Moral courage involves acting in the service of one’s convictions, in spite of the risk of retaliation or punishment. I suggest that moral courage also involves a capacity to face others as moral agents, and thus in a manner that does not objectify them. A moral stand can only be taken toward another moral agent.
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