Results 281 to 290 of about 303,515 (362)
Refusal to treat and refusal to continue treatment
Harold W. Hannah
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Ethical position of medical practitioners who refuse to treat unvaccinated children
Journal of Medical Ethics, 2019Recent reports in Australia have suggested that some medical practitioners are refusing to treat children who have not been vaccinated, a practice that has been observed in the USA and parts of Europe for some years. This behaviour, if it is indeed occurring in Australia, has not been supported by the Australian Medical Association, although there is ...
Mélanie Forster
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Blending to Treat Expulsion in a Child with Food Refusal
Behavioral Interventions, 2015The current study examined the effect of blending established foods and non‐preferred foods to treat expulsions in a three‐year‐old girl with food refusal and gastrostomy‐tube dependence. Treatment involving differential reinforcement of acceptance, non‐removal of the spoon, and re‐presentation increased consumption of 12 out of the 16 pureed foods ...
William G. Sharp +2 more
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The Morality of Refusing to Treat HIV‐positive Patients
Journal of Applied Philosophy, 1989ABSTRACT Do physicians and nurses have an obligation to treat patients who are HIV‐positive? Although an initial review of the possible sources of such an obligation yields equivocal results, a closer examination reveals a clear obligation to treat. The current risk of job‐caused HIV‐infection is not sufficient to warrant a refusal to treat.
Mitchell Silver
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The refusal to treat: abandonment and AIDS.
In this paper, I have focused on the issue of the clinical gastroenterologist who refuses to evaluate and endoscope the patient with AIDS. The discussion centers around the legal and ethical properties of such a decision, and the legal doctrine of abandonment.
Plumeri Pa
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Food Refusal, Anorexia and Soft Paternalism: What's at Stake?
Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, 2021:Anorexia nervosa, or restrictive anorexia, is one of a collection of disorders that includes bulimia and binging and purging syndromes. Because it is common (it is the second most common disorder diagnosed in adolescent girls, for example); hard to ...
J. Radden
semanticscholar +1 more source

