Results for 'Emotional care'

988 found
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  1.  26
    Decent People.Norman S. Care - 2000 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In Decent People, Norman Care explores how we may understand and be reconciled to the fragility of our moral nature. In his highly original vision of what it means to be a decent person, Care claims that our moral-emotional nature pressures us to seek relief from moralized pain - pain that comes from our awareness of our own wrongdoing, the suffering of current or future people, and our experience of indifference to moral imperatives. Care argues that (...)
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  2. Truth, Objectivity, and Emotional Caring: Filling in the Gaps of Haugeland's Existentialist Ontology.Bennett W. Helm - 2017 - In Zed Adams (ed.), Truth & Understanding: Essays in Honor of John Haugeland. pp. 213-41.
    In a remarkable series of papers, Haugeland lays out what is both a striking interpretation of Heidegger and a compelling account of objectivity and truth. Central to his account is a notion of existential commitment: a commitment to insist that one's understanding of the world succeeds in making sense of the phenomena and so potentially to change or give up on that understanding in the face of apparently impossible phenomena. Although Haugeland never gives a clear account of existential commitment, he (...)
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  3.  46
    The emotion: A crucial component in the care of critically ill patients.Maria Sagrario Acebedo-Urdiales, Maria Jiménez-Herrera, Carme Ferré-Grau, Isabel Font-Jiménez, Alba Roca-Biosca, Leticia Bazo-Hernández, M. José Castillo-Cepero, Maria Serret-Serret & José Luis Medina-Moya - 2018 - Nursing Ethics 25 (3):346-358.
    Background:The acquisition of experience is a major concern for nurses in intensive care units. Although the emotional component of the clinical practice of these nurses has been widely studied, greater examination is required to determine how this component influences their learning and practical experience.Objective:To discover the relationships between emotion, memory and learning and the impacts on nursing clinical practice.Research design:This is a qualitative phenomenological study. The data were collected from open, in-depth interviews. A total of 22 intensive (...) unit nurses participated in this research between January 2012 and December 2014.Ethical considerations:The School of Nursing Ethics Committee approved the study, which complied with ethical principles and required informed consent.Findings:We found a clear relationship between emotion, memory and the acquisition of experience. This relationship grouped three dimensions: (1) satisfaction, to relieve the patient’s pain or discomfort, give confidence and a sense of security to the patient, enable the presence of family members into the intensive care unit and provide family members with a realistic view of the patient’s situation; (2) error experience, which nurses feel when a patient dies, when they fail to accompany a patient in his or her decision to abandon the struggle to live or when they fail to lend support to the patient’s family; and (3) the feel bad–feel good paradox, which occurs when a mistake in the patient’s care or handling of his or her family is repaired.Conclusion:Emotion is a capacity that impacts on nurses’ experience and influences improvements in clinical practice. Recalling stories of satisfaction helps to reinforce good practice, while recalling stories of errors helps to identify difficulties in the profession and recognise new forms of action. The articulation of emotional competencies may support the development of nursing ethics in the intensive care unit to protect and defend their patients and improve their relationships with families in order to maximise the potential for patient care. (shrink)
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  4.  52
    What Emotions Motivate Care?Elena Pulcini - 2017 - Emotion Review 9 (1):64-71.
    The importance of emotions is supported by many authors of the ethics of care in contrast to the rationalistic paradigm of justice. However, the reference to the emotions remains generic. By focusing on three paradigmatic typologies, I propose to investigate this aspect further, and distinguish between the different emotions that motivate care. I will try, first, to offer a reflection on which emotions are likely to motivate ethical action within an ethics of care; second, to survey different (...)
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  5.  44
    Emotive responses to ethical challenges in caring.Gladys Msiska, Pam Smith & Tonks Fawcett - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (1):97-107.
    This article reports findings of a hermeneutic phenomenological study that explored the clinical learning experience for Malawian undergraduate student nurses. The study revealed issues that touch on both nursing education and practice, but the article mainly reports the practice issues. The findings reveal the emotions that healthcare workers in Malawi encounter as a consequence of practising in resource-poor settings. Furthermore, there is severe nursing shortage in most clinical settings in Malawi, and this adversely affects the performance of nurses because of (...)
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  6. Caring for the emotions: Toward a more balanced schooling.Clive Beck & Clare Madott Kosnik - forthcoming - Philosophy of Education.
     
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  7.  29
    Why Care about Emotions in Music.Gilead Bar-Elli - 2018 - Philosophia 46 (3):633-646.
    The article aims at discerning and explaining the significance and role of emotive notions in understanding music, in performing it or listening to it with the appropriate understanding. The suggestion focuses on two notions: that of making sense of various musical features and their interconnections, and that of helping manage the enormous information one needs to process in keeping on the trail of the music in real time.
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  8.  9
    Passionate deliberation: emotion, temperance, and the care ethic in clinical moral deliberation.Mark F. Carr - 2001 - Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    "Application of the possibilities for this renewal of temperance comes with an examination of how emotion will help moral deliberation in the clinical practice of medicine. Sir William Osler (1849-1919) and his doctrine of aequanimitas is greatly misunderstood to be the founder of emotional detachment in physician/patient relations. This book offers the most detailed look at aequanimitas in print and equates it with a normative view of temperance as a moral virtue." "For upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level students interested in (...)
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  9.  62
    Reframing emotion in education through lenses of parrhesia and care of the self.Michalinos Zembylas & Lynn Fendler - 2007 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 26 (4):319-333.
    In this article, we critique two theoretical positions that analyze the place of emotions in education: the psychological strand and the cultural feminist strand. First of all, it is shown how a social control of emotions in education is reflected in the combination of psychological and cultural feminist discourses that function to govern one’s self effectively and efficiently. These discourses perpetuate an assumed divide between the rational and the emotional, and reinforce the existing power hierarchies and the status quo (...)
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  10.  15
    Care Ethics and the Refugee Crisis: Emotions, Contestation, and Agency.Marcia Morgan - 2020 - New York: Routledge.
    This book advocates for the philosophical import of care in re-evaluating problems of humanitarianism in the context of the ongoing international refugee and forced migration situation. In doing so, it rethinks the human capacity to care about the suffering of distant others. At a time when emotional resources are running low, there is a need to recast what it means to care, with the aim of generating a productive movement against the rise of value fundamentalism globally—embraced (...)
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  11. Social Ontology. Emotional Sharing as the Foundation of Care Relationships.Guido Cusinato - 2018 - In S. Bourgault & E. Pulcini, Emotions and Care: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Peeters.
    The origin of the concept of “emotional sharing” can be traced back to the first edition of Sympathiebuch [1913/23], in which Max Scheler paved the way to a phenomenology of emotions and to social ontology. The importance of his findings is evident: consider the central role of emotional sharing in Michael Tomasello’s analysis and the lively debate on social ontology and collective intentionality.
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  12. The unity of caring and the rationality of emotion.Jeffrey Seidman - 2016 - Philosophical Studies 173 (10):2785-2801.
    Caring is a complex attitude. At first look, it appears very complex: it seems to involve a wide range of emotional and other dispositions, all focused on the object cared about. What ties these dispositions together, so that they jointly comprise a single attitude? I offer a theory of caring, the Attentional Theory, that answers this question. According to the Attentional Theory, caring consists of just two, logically distinct dispositions: a disposition to attend to an object and hence to (...)
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  13.  6
    Emotions and Values in Practice: The Case of Elderly Care.Søren Harnow Klausen, Regina Christiansen, Jakob Emiliussen & Søren Engelsen - 2021 - Danish Yearbook of Philosophy 56 (2):112-135.
    The moral and epistemic significance of emotions has been increasingly emphasized in recent philosophy. The focus has been mostly on metaethical questions. We add a new perspective by considering the practical importance of gauging, reacting to, enhancing, or reducing the emotions of others and oneself. We focus particularly on the collective aspect of emotion development and regulation, how emotions are entangled with values, and how they may be used constructively for handling otherwise difficult situations. We use the case of elderly (...)
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  14.  37
    Aesthetic, Emotion and Empathetic Imagination: Beyond Innovation to Creativity in the Health and Social Care Workforce.Deborah Munt & Janet Hargreaves - 2009 - Health Care Analysis 17 (4):285-295.
    The Creativity in Health and Care Workshops programme was a series of investigative workshops aimed at interrogating the subject of creativity with an over-arching objective of extending the understanding of the problems and possibilities of applying creativity within the health and care sector workforce. Included in the workshops was a concept analysis, which attempted to gain clearer understanding of creativity and innovation within this context. The analysis led to emergent theory regarding the central importance of aesthetics, emotion and (...)
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  15.  17
    A Care-Based Approach to Transformative Change: Ethically-Informed Practices, Relational Response-Ability & Emotional Awareness.Angela Moriggi, Katriina Soini, Alex Franklin & Dirk Roep - 2020 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 23 (3):281-298.
    Notions of care for humans and more-than-humans appear at the margins of the sustainability transformations debate. This paper explores the merits of an ethics of care approach to sustainability tr...
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  16. S. Bourgault & E. Pulcini, Emotions and Care: Interdisciplinary Perspectives.Guido Cusinato (ed.) - 2018 - Peeters.
     
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  17.  34
    Emotional labor and nursing: an under-appreciated aspect of caring work.Angela Henderson - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (2):130-138.
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  18.  67
    Caring for Teacher Emotion: Reflections on Teacher Self-Development.Michalinos Zembylas - 2003 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 22 (2):103-125.
  19.  54
    Emotional Labor in Health Care: The Moderating Roles of Personality and the Mediating Role of Sleep on Job Performance and Satisfaction.Shu-Chuan Jennifer Yeh, Shih-Hua Sarah Chen, Kuo-Shu Yuan, Willy Chou & Thomas T. H. Wan - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    The objective of this study is to investigate the effects of emotional labor on job performance and satisfaction, as well as to examine the mediating effect of sleep problems and the moderating effects of personality traits. A time-lagged study was conducted on 864 health professionals. Scales for emotional labor, sleep, personality traits, and job satisfaction were used and job performance data was obtained from records maintained by human resources. Structural equation modeling was performed to investigate the relations. Sleep (...)
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  20.  12
    Emotional and Motivational Tendencies: the key to quality nursing care?S. Glen - 1998 - Nursing Ethics 5 (1):36-42.
    The question of how to improve the quality of nursing care is quite properly perceived to be at the heart of the contemporary nursing debate. Yet it is not clear what quality in health care is; nor is it clear what quality nursing care is. This article will explore why quality issues are such a matter of concern in public and political debate and how different concepts of quality determine different definitions of nursing. The former definitions constitute (...)
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  21.  22
    The sensible health care professional: a care ethical perspective on the role of caregivers in emotionally turbulent practices.Vivianne Baur, Inge van Nistelrooij & Linus Vanlaere - 2017 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 20 (4):483-493.
    This article discusses the challenging context that health care professionals are confronted with, and the impact of this context on their emotional experiences. Care ethics considers emotions as a valuable source of knowledge for good care. Thinking with care ethical theory and looking through a care ethical lens at a practical case example, the authors discern reflective questions that shed light on a care ethical approach toward the role of emotions in care (...)
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  22.  9
    Emotions, Ethics, and Decisions in Primary Care.Julia Connelly - 1998 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 9 (3):225-234.
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  23.  9
    Taking Care of Emotions - from Within, from Without.Simón Guendelman & Marisa Przyrembel - 2021 - Constructivist Foundations 16 (2):224-226.
    Understanding subjective processes in mindfulness-based interventions and during contemplative learning is the goal pursued by Medeiros et al. in the present target article. Implicitly, they touch ….
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  24.  19
    Emotions and Care: Interdisciplinary Perspectives Sophie Bourgault and Elena Pulcini (editors). Leuven: Peeters, 2018.Maurice Hamington - 2021 - Hypatia 36 (4):1-5.
  25.  29
    How emotions are made: the secret life of the brain.Lisa Feldman Barrett - 2017 - Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
    A new theory of how the brain constructs emotions that could revolutionize psychology, health care, law enforcement, and our understanding of the human mind Emotions feel automatic, like uncontrollable reactions to things we think and experience. Scientists have long supported this assumption by claiming that emotions are hardwired in the body or the brain. Today, however, the science of emotion is in the midst of a revolution on par with the discovery of relativity in physics and natural selection in (...)
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  26.  7
    "Caring for patients with dementia: an indication for" emotional communism".Edmund G. Howe - 1998 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 9 (1):3-11.
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  27.  50
    “Choice” and “emotion” in altruism: Reflections on the morality of justice versus the morality of caring.Ross Buck - 2002 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (2):254-255.
    Rachlin uses the word “choice” 80 times, whereas “emotion” does not appear. In contrast, “Empathy: Its ultimate and proximate bases” by Preston and de Waal, uses the word “emotion” 139 times and “choice” once. This commentary compares these ways of approaching empathy and altruism, relating Rachlin's approach to Gilligan's Morality of Justice and Preston and de Waal's to the Morality of Caring.
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  28.  18
    Continuities in caring? Emotion work in a NHS Direct call centre.Hannele Weir & Kathryn Waddington - 2008 - Nursing Inquiry 15 (1):67-77.
    Changes in technological and economic aspects of society have impacted on how we understand professional and client relationships. These relationships are constructed in terms of patients/users requiring care, and customers whose complaints have become a yardstick of satisfaction. A consequence of these changes is an interest in the related concepts of emotional labour and emotion work. For nurses, caring for people in illness and in health is central to their work, and it is this aspect of emotion at (...)
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  29.  5
    Tenuous relationships: Exploitation, emotion, and racial ethnic significance in paid child care work.Mary Tuominen & Lynet Uttal - 1999 - Gender and Society 13 (6):758-780.
    The relatively recent shift of family caregiving to the public market of service work raises questions about how to theorize paid caregiving. This article examines how to conceptualize child rearing when it is transferred to a paid worker. The gendered character of commodified caregiving is complicated by structural locations of race and class that define the employer-employee relationship. Previous discussions of paid child care work as emotionally meaningful work have been criticized as idealizations that mask the exploitative nature of (...)
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  30.  39
    Willingness to express emotion depends upon perceiving partner care.Katherine R. Von Culin, Jennifer L. Hirsch & Margaret S. Clark - 2017 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (3):641-650.
    Two studies document that people are more willing to express emotions that reveal vulnerabilities to partners when they perceive those partners to be more communally responsive to them. In Study 1, participants rated the communal strength they thought various partners felt toward them and their own willingness to express happiness, sadness and anxiety to each partner. Individuals who generally perceive high communal strength from their partners were also generally most willing to express emotion to partners. Independently, participants were more willing (...)
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  31.  30
    Interaction between emotions and somatic complaints in children who did or did not seek medical care.Carolien Rieffe, Mark Meerum Terwogt, Joop D. Bosch, C. M. Frank Kneepkens, Adriaan C. Douwes & Francine C. Jellesma - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (8):1630-1646.
  32.  49
    Making space for empathy: supporting doctors in the emotional labour of clinical care.Angeliki Kerasidou & Ruth Horn - 2016 - BMC Medical Ethics 17 (1):1-5.
    BackgroundThe academic and medical literature highlights the positive effects of empathy for patient care. Yet, very little attention has been given to the impact of the requirement for empathy on the physicians themselves and on their emotional wellbeing.DiscussionThe medical profession requires doctors to be both clinically competent and empathetic towards the patients. In practice, accommodating both requirements can be difficult for physicians. The image of the technically skilful, rational, and emotionally detached doctor dominates the profession, and inhibits physicians (...)
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  33.  99
    Terminal sedation: an emotional decision in end-of-life care.Simon Noah Etkind - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (8):508-509.
    A patient with end-stage motor neurone disease was admitted for hospice care with worsening bulbar symptoms. Although he initially walked onto the ward he became very distressed and asked for sedation. After much discussion, this man was deeply sedated, and after some harrowing days, died. Was it right to provide terminal sedation? What should the threshold be for such treatment? How should our personal reservations affect how we approach the distressed patient in an end-of-life situation?
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  34.  41
    Promotion of Resilience and Emotional Self-Care in Families and Health Professionals in Times of COVID-19.Óscar Sánchez-Hernández, Merav Barkavi-Shani & Rosa María Bermejo - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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  35. The Emotional Mind: the affective roots of culture and cognition.Stephen Asma & Rami Gabriel - 2019 - Harvard University Press.
    Tracing the leading role of emotions in the evolution of the mind, a philosopher and a psychologist pair up to reveal how thought and culture owe less to our faculty for reason than to our capacity to feel. Many accounts of the human mind concentrate on the brain’s computational power. Yet, in evolutionary terms, rational cognition emerged only the day before yesterday. For nearly 200 million years before humans developed a capacity to reason, the emotional centers of the brain (...)
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  36.  10
    E. N. Anderson: Caring for place: ecology, ideology, and emotion in traditional landscape management.Susan Stevens Hummel - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (2):495-496.
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  37.  81
    Emotions in ancient and medieval philosophy.Simo Knuuttila - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Emotions are the focus of intense debate both in contemporary philosophy and psychology, and increasingly also in the history of ideas. Simo Knuuttila presents a comprehensive survey of philosophical theories of emotion from Plato to Renaissance times, combining rigorous philosophical analysis with careful historical reconstruction. The first part of the book covers the conceptions of Plato and Aristotle and later ancient views from Stoicism to Neoplatonism and, in addition, their reception and transformation by early Christian thinkers from Clement and Origen (...)
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  38. Emotionally guiding our actions.Mary Carman - 2018 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 48 (1):43-64.
    If emotions have a rational role in action, then one challenge for accounting for how we can act rationally when acting emotionally is to show how we can guide our actions by our emotional considerations, seen as reasons. In this paper, I put forward a novel proposal for how this can be so. Drawing on the interconnection between emotions, cares and caring, I argue that, as the emotional agent is a caring agent, she can be aware of the (...)
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  39.  30
    Does the Disease of the Person Receiving Care Affect the Emotional State of Non-professional Caregivers?Patricia Otero, Ángela J. Torres, Fernando L. Vázquez, Vanessa Blanco, María J. Ferraces & Olga Díaz - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Research on mental health of non-professional caregivers has focused on caregivers of people with specific diseases, especially dementia. Less is known about caregivers of people with other diseases. The aims of this study were (a) to determine the caregivers’ emotional state in a random sample of caregivers of people in situations of dependency, (b) to analyze the association between each disease of the care-recipient (a variety of 23 diseases included in the International Classification of Diseases) and the (...) state of the caregiver, and (c) based on the theoretical model, to analyze the relationship of the different study variables in the appearance of the emotional distress of the caregiver. A sample of 491 non-professional caregivers was selected randomly (89.0% women, average age 55.3 years). Trained psychologists collected sociodemographic and care-related characteristics and evaluated the global emotional distress, somatic symptoms, anxiety-insomnia, social dysfunction, depression, probable mental disorder case, self-esteem and social support. It was found that (a) the caregivers showed moderate emotional distress, and 33.8% presented a probable mental disorder. (b) Caring for a care-recipient with cat's cry syndrome or epilepsy was related to suffering from social dysfunction, and caring for a care-recipient with autism was related to having a probable mental health case. (c) Social support mediated the relationship between social class, daily hours of care, monthly family income, self-esteem and global emotional distress. There is an important impact on the emotional state of the caregivers. This impact was similar in caregivers of care-recipients with different diseases, except in caregivers caring for a care-recipient with cat's cry syndrome or epilepsy (related to social dysfunction), and in caregivers caring for a care-recipient with autism (related to having a probable mental health case). (shrink)
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  40.  44
    Quality care for persons experiencing dementia: The significance of relational ethics.Gerd S. Sellevold, Veslemøy Egede-Nissen, Rita Jakobsen & Venke Sørlie - 2013 - Nursing Ethics (3):0969733012462050.
    The degree of success in creating quality care for people suffering from dementia is limited despite extensive research. This article describes Healthcare providers’ experience with the ethical challenges and possibilities in the relationship with patients suffering from dementia and its impact on quality care. The material is based on qualitative, in-depth individual narrative interviews with 12 professional Healthcare providers from two different nursing homes. The transcribed interview texts were subjected to a phenomenological–hermeneutical interpretation. To provide quality care (...)
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  41.  90
    Emotion.Carolyn Price - 2015 - Malden, Massachusetts: Polity Press.
    Emotion is at the centre of our personal and social lives. To love or to hate, to be frightened or grateful is not just a matter of how we feel on the inside: our emotional responses direct our thoughts and actions, unleash our imaginations, and structure our relationships with others. Yet the role of emotion in human life has long been disputed. Is emotion reason?s friend or its foe? From where do the emotions really arise? Why do we need (...)
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  42.  15
    The Inner Lives of Doctors: Physician Emotion in the Care of the Seriously Ill.Julie Childers & Bob Arnold - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (12):29-34.
    Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’ seminal 1969 work, On Death and Dying, opened the door to understanding individuals’ emotional experiences with serious illness and dying. Patient’s emotions, however, are on...
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  43.  5
    Daniele Bruzzone, Emotional Life: Phenomenology, Education and Care, “Phänomenologische Erziehungswissenschaft” vol. 14, Springer VS, Wiesbaden, ISBN: 978-3-658-42547-0, XII-84 pages, 2023. [REVIEW]Malte Brinkmann - 2023 - ENCYCLOPAIDEIA 27 (67):109-110.
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  44.  48
    EEG-Based Analysis of the Emotional Effect of Music Therapy on Palliative Care Cancer Patients.Rafael Ramirez, Josep Planas, Nuria Escude, Jordi Mercade & Cristina Farriols - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
  45.  24
    The relationship amongst student nurses’ values, emotional intelligence and individualised care perceptions.Yeliz Culha & Rengin Acaroglu - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics:096973301879668.
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  46.  23
    Making space for empathy: supporting doctors in the emotional labour of clinical care.Angeliki Kerasidou & Ruth Horn - forthcoming - Most Recent Articles: Bmc Medical Ethics.
    The academic and medical literature highlights the positive effects of empathy for patient care. Yet, very little attention has been given to the impact of the requirement for empathy on the physicians themsel..
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  47.  11
    “I Feel as if I Am the One Who Is Disabled”: The Emotional Impact of Changed Employment Trajectories of Mothers Caring for Children with Disabilities.Ellen K. Scott - 2010 - Gender and Society 24 (5):672-696.
    Despite the 1970s middle-class feminist dream that women could have it all—families characterized by equitable distributions of household labor and interesting careers—the decades since have told a different story. In the U.S. context of a neoliberal labor market and privatized systems of family care, mothers still struggle to negotiate the conflicting demands of family and employment, particularly when caring for children with disabilities. Though an extensive literature examines labor market participation for mothers of children with disabilities, few scholars have (...)
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  48.  37
    Care, Attachments and Concerns.Kevin Mulligan - 2022 - Emotion Review 14 (4):254-256.
    Emotion Review, Volume 14, Issue 4, Page 254-256, October 2022. Müller's account of the way episodic emotions function depends on a contrast between these and what he calls cares, concerns and attachments and the claim that the latter are in several respects prior to the former. The account seems to attribute no normative features to the latter. But this is implausible. If a preference for liberty over social justice is a concern, it is justified if liberty really is more important (...)
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  49.  44
    Emotions and Personhood: Exploring Fragility - Making Sense of Vulnerability.Giovanni Stanghellini & René Rosfort - 2013 - Oxford University Press.
    Emotions and personhood are important notions within the field of mental health care. How they are related is less evident. This book provides a framework for understanding the important and complex relationship between our emotional wellbeing and our sense of self, drawing on psychopathology, philosophy, and phenomenology.
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  50.  83
    Emotions and Ethical Considerations of Women Undergoing IVF-Treatments.Sofia Kaliarnta, Jessica Nihlén-Fahlquist & Sabine Roeser - 2011 - HEC Forum 23 (4):281-293.
    Women who suffer from fertility issues often use in vitro fertilization (IVF) to realize their wish to have children. However, IVF has its own set of strict administration rules that leave the women physically and emotionally exhausted. Feeling alienated and frustrated, many IVF users turn to internet IVF-centered forums to share their stories and to find information and support. Based on the observation of Dutch and Greek IVF forums and a selection of 109 questionnaires from Dutch and Greek IVF forum (...)
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