Results 251 to 260 of about 986,131 (289)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Language, Philosophy, and Medical Education
Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 2021When medical schools began to recognize, a generation ago, that clinical "communication skills" could not be taken for granted among students, a process began of researching them, and introducing the results into curricula. This allowed for a discussion, for the first time, about how doctors should talk to patients, and manage interviews with them ...
openaire +2 more sources
2022
Abstract At one point in the midst of his agonies of obsessive jealousy over Odette, Swann is described as coming to a realization about his love and his suffering that is both philosophical and therapeutic, and which will be part of his equipment for living ever afterward. The description of romantic love as a “malady” is perhaps as old
openaire +1 more source
Abstract At one point in the midst of his agonies of obsessive jealousy over Odette, Swann is described as coming to a realization about his love and his suffering that is both philosophical and therapeutic, and which will be part of his equipment for living ever afterward. The description of romantic love as a “malady” is perhaps as old
openaire +1 more source
Philosophy and Medical Education
Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, 1995The most effective way to integrate philosophy into medical education uses ethical, social, and conceptual problems arising in medical practice such as those about informed consent, confidentiality, competency, resource allocation, the doctor-patient relationship, and death and dying.
openaire +2 more sources
A new philosophy of medical imaging
Medical Hypotheses, 1991In general, the traditional approach to medical imaging is based on the solution of the inverse problem of deducing the characteristics of tissues within the body from the received field resulting from probing radiation. Ambiguities and lack of complete data, and physical limitations such as diffraction, field non-uniformity and so on, prevent the ...
A P, Sarvazyan, F L, Lizzi, P N, Wells
openaire +2 more sources
Medical philosophy and medical ethics.
Medicine, health care, and philosophy, 2004Contains fulltext : 57282.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)
openaire +2 more sources
PHILOSOPHY OF A MEDICAL SERVICE PLAN
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1948Even until recently many physicians refused to admit the existence of a social problem in medical care. Today, however, most of them recognize and admit that the distribution of medical care is faulty. Physicians must recognize the moral implication always associated with any social problem. The responsibility for the solution of this social and moral
openaire +3 more sources
The ‘Medical Body’ As Philosophy's Arena
Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 2001Medicine, as Byron Good argues, reconstitutes the human body of our daily experience as a "medical body," unfamiliar outside medicine. This reconstitution can be seen in two ways: (i) as a salutary reminder of the extent to which the reality even of the human body is constructed; and (ii) as an arena for what Stephen Toulmin distinguishes as the ...
openaire +3 more sources
Philosophy in Medical Education
In recent years, philosophy of science has increasingly engaged with scientific practice and with the distinctive features of various specific scientific disciplines. Simultaneously, a significant debate has been growing on teaching philosophy to scientists: reflections have been fostered on the role that some competence in philosophy can play for non ...openaire +2 more sources

