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'Paternalism' and Primary Care-Reply
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1985In Reply .—Dr Owens' letter highlights several interesting points. First, we agree with her and Dr Green that excessive dependence upon health care providers may be a common phenomenon in the setting of private practice. The focus of our article upon the public clinic was borne of our professional experience and was not meant to imply that similar ...
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Paternal care and male ornamentation
1994Abstract Measurement of indirect fitness benefits through sexual selection are simplified in the absence of obvious direct fitness benefits such as parental care (see Chapter 2). Analysis of the relative contribution of direct and indirect fitness benefits through mate choice quickly becomes difficult when both components are present ...
Anders Pape Møller, Jens Gregersen
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Caring for the dying: Advocacy or paternalism
Death Education, 1979Moral dilemmas in the care of a dying person ideally should be decided in the context of that person's own freely determined understanding of death. At the philosophical, the clinical, and the personal levels, the primal question of how to understand death must be addressed before decisions are made concerning much ethical problems as euthanasia ...
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Paternalism in the neonatal intensive care unit
Theoretical Medicine, 1984Two factors are discussed which have important implications for the issue of paternalism in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU): the physician's role as advocate for the patient; and the range of typical responses of parents who learn that their neonate has a serious illness.
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On Paternalism and Health Care
1978The model called to mind by the word ‘paternalism’ is the way a father acts towards his children. Of course, we should not think in terms of a malicious or self-centered father, but rather of a benevolent and loving father who does only what he sincerely believes is in the best interests of his children.
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The Evolution of Paternal Care
2013I describe an agent-based model to study the evolution of paternal care. The reported n-person Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma shows that the relative differences in the reproductive effort between sexes can explain the evolution of paternal care. When female reproductive costs are higher than male reproductive costs, males cooperate with females even when
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