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Rationing and Professional Autonomy
Law, Medicine and Health Care, 1990The effort to control inflation of the cost of health care in the United States in recent years has focused on a strategy of introducing competition by encouraging prospective payment systems such as DRGs and HMOs. Changes associated with these new payment systems have engendered a debate that has been conducted partly in terms of medical ethics ...
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Business Ethics Quarterly, 1996
AbstractEmployed professionals (e.g., accountants or engineers)—and those who study them—sometimes claim that their status as employees denies them the “autonomy” necessary to be “true professionals.” Is this a conceptual claim or an empirical claim? How might it be proved or disproved? This paper draws on recent work on autonomy to try to answer these
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AbstractEmployed professionals (e.g., accountants or engineers)—and those who study them—sometimes claim that their status as employees denies them the “autonomy” necessary to be “true professionals.” Is this a conceptual claim or an empirical claim? How might it be proved or disproved? This paper draws on recent work on autonomy to try to answer these
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Managing Professionals and Professional Autonomy
Higher Education Quarterly, 1992Abstract Professionals have concerns about their freedom and autonomy, particularly when they work within organisations. Managers have corporate goals to achieve and have few sources of power with which to direct the professionals. This paper argues that given a high calibre of managerial leadership it is possible to manage the professionals.
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The measurement of professional autonomy
Journal of Professional Nursing, 1987Achievement of autonomy is a major step in nursing's struggle for full professional status. Efforts to measure the development of such autonomy require instruments such as the one produced in this study. An instrument of 30 weighted items was developed in a two-stage study. In the first stage Guttman scale analysis was used in an effort to develop a 12-
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CRNA : the clinical forum for nurse anesthetists, 1998
Professional autonomy may represent the first step to implementing measures that will allow CRNAs to attain a level of independent practice consistent with their clinical and educational training. Autonomy is regarded as an essential ingredient of professionalism and confers independent function at the individual practitioner level.
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Professional autonomy may represent the first step to implementing measures that will allow CRNAs to attain a level of independent practice consistent with their clinical and educational training. Autonomy is regarded as an essential ingredient of professionalism and confers independent function at the individual practitioner level.
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Professional Autonomy in the Health Care System
Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 2000Professional autonomy interferes at a structural level with the various aspects of the health care system. The health care systems that can be distinguished all feature a specific design of professional autonomy, but experience their own governance problems.
Polder, JJ (Johan), Jochemsen, H
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PROFESSIONAL AUTONOMY IN NURSES
Nursing Administration Quarterly, 1993A M, Tomey, D J, Thomas, S, Thomas
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Genetic testing in prostate cancer management: Considerations informing primary care
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Veda N Giri +2 more
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Planning for post‐pandemic cancer care delivery: Recovery or opportunity for redesign?
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021Pelin Cinar +2 more
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