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Reply to Ann Bradshaw

Journal of Medical Ethics 22 (1):13-15 (1996)

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  1. Ethos.Lillemor Östman, Yvonne Näsman, Katie Eriksson & Lisbet Nyström - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics:096973301769565.
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  • Kindness, prescribed and natural, in medicine.W. G. Pickering - 1997 - Journal of Medical Ethics 23 (2):116-118.
    To omit the word kindness in medical practice and journals, in favour of fashionable notions such as "care" and "skills", is not in patients' interests. Health professionals may come to the view that natural kindness (the same as that found in the world outside medicine), because it is absent by name in medical skills courses' or other official edicts, is somehow unscientific and unworthy of their attention. As lay-people know, it is an essential adjunct to all medical management, sometimes the (...)
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  • Noddings's caring ethics theory applied in a paediatric setting.Anita Lundqvist & Tore Nilstun - 2009 - Nursing Philosophy 10 (2):113-123.
    Since the 1990s, numerous studies on the relationship between parents and their children have been reported on in the literature and implemented as a philosophy of care in most paediatric units. The purpose of this article is to understand the process of nurses' care for children in a paediatric setting by using Noddings's caring ethics theory. Noddings's theory is in part described from a theoretical perspective outlining the basic idea of the theory followed by a critique of her work. Important (...)
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  • Gender in medical ethics: Re-examining the conceptual basis of empirical research.Elisabeth Conradi, Nikola Biller-Andorno, Margarete Boos, Christina Sommer & Claudia Wiesemann - 2003 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 6 (1):51-58.
    Conducting empirical research on gender in medical ethics is a challenge from a theoretical as well as a practical point of view. It still has to be clarified how gender aspects can be integrated without sustaining gender stereotypes. The developmental psychologist Carol Gilligan was among the first to question ethics from a gendered point of view. The notion of care introduced by her challenged conventional developmental psychology as well as moral philosophy. Gilligan was criticised, however, because her concept of ‘two (...)
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