Results 231 to 240 of about 11,252 (289)

Professional misconduct: the Bristol case

open access: yesMedical Journal of Australia, 1998
In June 1998, the Professional Conduct Committee of the General Medical Council of the United Kingdom (the body which regulates British doctors) concluded the longest-running case it has considered this century. Three medical practitioners were accused to serious professional misconduct relating to 29 deaths (and four survivors with brain damage) in 53
Bolsin, Stephen N.
openaire   +3 more sources

Inserting professionals and professional organizations in studies of wrongdoing: The nature, antecedents and consequences of professional misconduct [PDF]

open access: yesHuman Relations, 2019
Professional misconduct has become seemingly ubiquitous in recent decades. However, to date there has been little sustained effort to theorize the phenomenon of professional misconduct, how this relates to professional organizations, and how this may ...
Claudia Gabbioneta   +2 more
exaly   +4 more sources

Professional Misconduct in Healthcare: Setting Out a Research Agenda for Work Sociology [PDF]

open access: yesWork, Employment and Society, 2019
In the light of its surprising absence in extant literature in the domain of the sociology of work, specifically within the journal Work, Employment and Society, this article represents a ‘call to arms’ for research focused upon professional misconduct ...
Graeme Currie   +2 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Professional Misconduct.

open access: yesThe Indian medical gazette
Any advocate and solicitor who has been found guilty of misconduct under the 16 circumstances mentioned in s. 94(3) shall be liable to one or more of the following penalties or punishments: to be struck off the Roll of Advocates and Solicitors, to be ...
Ahmad, Muhamad Hassan   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Professional Misconduct and Ethics

Clinics in Perinatology, 2007
Quality medical care focuses on achieving the greatest benefit while minimizing the risk of patient harm. This standard can become clouded in the case of a parturient and her fetus. The maternal-fetal relationship is unlike any other faced by physicians due to the fetus' complete physiologic dependence on the mother and because both the fetus and ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Obstacles to addressing professional misconduct

Clinical Psychology Review, 1998
The Ethical Principles exhort psychologists "to encourage ethical behavior by students, supervisees, employees, and colleagues, as appropriate" (American Psychological Association, 1992, p. 1599). In spite of a clear directive to attempt resolution of unethical conduct by colleagues, research indicates that satisfactory resolution or actual reporting ...
M, Biaggio, R, Duffy, D F, Staffelbach
openaire   +2 more sources

Serious Professional Misconduct: The Judicial View

open access: yesMedicine, Science and the Law, 1994
Barrister, J.P., Samuels, Alec
openaire   +3 more sources

Professional conduct and misconduct

2013
Standards of conduct in any profession reflect the shared values of that profession and define behaviors by its members that are considered either mandatory or proscribed. This chapter will provide an overview of several of the primary aspects of professional conduct and misconduct by physicians, with an emphasis on the neurologist where appropriate ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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