Results for 'Medical emergencies'

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  1.  79
    Decisions Relating to Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation: a joint statement from the British Medical Association, the Resuscitation Council (UK) and the Royal College of Nursing.British Medical Association - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (5):310.
    Summary Principles Timely support for patients and people close to them, and effective, sensitive communication are essential. Decisions must be based on the individual patient's circumstances and reviewed regularly. Sensitive advance discussion should always be encouraged, but not forced. Information about CPR and the chances of a successful outcome needs to be realistic. Practical matters Information about CPR policies should be displayed for patients and staff. Leaflets should be available for patients and people close to them explaining about CPR, how (...)
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  2.  36
    Enforcing Conscientious Objection to Abortion in Medical Emergency Circumstances: Criminal and Unethical.Udo Schuklenk & Benjamin Zolf - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (7):60-61.
    Lawrence Nelson discusses cases in which abortion is necessary due to a life-threatening medical emergency. He argues that under American law, health care providers who conscientiously refuse to pe...
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  3.  10
    Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) Care Coordination: Navigating Ethics and Access in the Emergence of a New Health Profession.Marta Simpson-Tirone, Samantha Jansen & Marilyn Swinton - 2022 - HEC Forum 34 (4):457-481.
    Medical assistance in dying (MAiD) in Canada is a complex, novel interprofessional practice governed by stringent legal criteria. Often, patients need assistance navigating the system, and MAiD providers/assessors struggle with the administrative challenges of MAiD. Resultantly, the role of the MAiD care coordinator has emerged across the country as a novel practice dedicated to supporting access to MAiD and ensuring compliance with regulatory requirements. However, variability in the roles and responsibilities of MAiD care coordinators across Canada has highlighted the (...)
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  4.  13
    Significant Protection-Inclusion Tensions in Research on Medical Emergencies: A Practical Challenge for IRBs.Rachel C. Conrad, Neal W. Dickert & Benjamin C. Silverman - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (6):91-93.
    Friesen et al. (2023) describe barriers to research in patient populations that have been historically labeled as vulnerable and, as a result, are under-represented in research due to the Instituti...
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  5.  5
    The Emergence of Roman Catholic Medical Ethics in North America: An Historical, Methodological, Bibliographical Study.David F. Kelly - 1979 - New York ; Toronto : E. Mellen Press.
    Focusing on general texts of moral theology, this study investigates how Roman Catholic medical ethics emerged in North America as a developed and self-conscious discipline. It applies questions that Roman Catholic moralists have been pondering for centuries to the relatively new field of medical ethics.
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  6.  11
    Medical utopias: ethical reflections about emerging medical technologies.Bert Gordijn - 2006 - Dudley, Mass.: Peeters.
    The field of medicine is generally greeted with great enthusiasm. This can be witnessed in the immense support for medical progress, which is widely hoped to lead to a realization of idealized goals. Indeed, with the help of medicine the human body would be controllable and constructible, human nature perfectible. However, enthusiasm in favor of medical progress is first and foremost a sentiment and, like all sentiments, not necessarily a product of rational contemplation. People are capable of enthusing (...)
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  7.  48
    Experiences of pre-hospital emergency medical personnel in ethical decision-making: a qualitative study.Mohammad Torabi, Fariba Borhani, Abbas Abbaszadeh & Foroozan Atashzadeh-Shoorideh - 2018 - BMC Medical Ethics 19 (1):95.
    Emergency care providers regularly deal with ethical dilemmas that must be addressed. In comparison with in-hospital nurses, emergency medical service personnel are faced with more problems such as distance to resources including personnel, medico-technical aids, and information; the unpredictable atmosphere at the scene; arriving at the crime scene and providing emergency care for accident victims and patients at home. As a result of stressfulness, unpredictability, and often the life threatening nature of tasks that ambulance professionals have to deal with (...)
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  8.  96
    Emerging medical technologies and emerging conceptions of health.William E. Stempsey - 2006 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 27 (3):227-243.
    Using ideas gleaned from the philosophy of technology of Martin Heidegger and Hans Jonas and the philosophy of health of Georges Canguilhem, I argue that one of the characteristics of emerging medical technologies is that these technologies lead to new conceptions of health. When technologies enable the body to respond to more and more challenges of disease, we thus establish new norms of health. Given the continued development of successful technologies, we come to expect more and more that our (...)
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  9.  32
    Medical ethics and the climate change emergency.Cressida Auckland, Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby, Kenneth Boyd, Brian D. Earp, Lucy Frith, Zoë Fritz, John McMillan, Arianne Shahvisi & Mehrunisha Suleman - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (12):939-940.
    The editors of the _Journal of Medical Ethics_ support the call of the UK Health Alliance on Climate for urgent action to ensure that the current Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change ‘finally delivers climate justice for Africa and vulnerable countries’. 1 As they note ‘Africa has suffered disproportionately although it has done little to cause the crisis’. The burden of climate change has thus far fallen disproportionately on Global South countries. The (...)
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  10.  67
    Assessing the ethics of medical research in emergency settings: How do international regulations work in practice?Ritva Halila - 2007 - Science and Engineering Ethics 13 (3):305-313.
    Different ethical principles conflict in research conducted in emergency research. Clinical care and its development should be based on research. Patients in critical clinical condition are in the greatest need of better medicines. The critical condition of the patient and the absence of a patient representative at the critical time period make it difficult and sometimes impossible to request an informed consent before the beginning of the trial. In an emergency, care decisions must be made in a short period of (...)
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  11.  14
    Emergence of multidrug resistance in bacteria and impact on antibiotic expenditure at a major Army medical center caring for soldiers wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan.Michael J. Zapor, Daniel Erwin, Goldina Erowele & Glenn Wortmann - 2008 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 29 (7):661-663.
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  12.  11
    Emerging Public Health Law and Policy Issues Concerning State Medical Cannabis Programs.William C. Tilburg, James G. Hodge & Camille Gourdet - 2019 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (S2):108-111.
    Thirty-four states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico have legalized medical cannabis. While no two state medical cannabis programs are alike, public health concerns related to advertising, packaging and labeling, pesticide use, scientific research, and the role of medical cannabis in the opioid crisis are emerging across the country. This article examines these issues, the policy approaches states are adopting to protect patients and the public, and an assessment of the underlying federal legal landscape.
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  13.  27
    The Emergence of Genetic Counseling in Sweden: Examples from Eugenics and Medical Genetics.Maria Björkman - 2015 - Science in Context 28 (3):489-513.
    ArgumentThis paper examines the intertwined relations between eugenics and medical genetics from a Swedish perspective in the 1940s and 1950s. The Swedish case shows that a rudimentary form of genetic counseling emerged within eugenic practices in the applications of the Swedish Sterilization Act of 1941, here analyzed from the phenomenon of “heredophobia” (ärftlighetsskräck). At the same time genetic counseling also existed outside eugenic practices, within the discipline of medical genetics. The paper argues that a demand for genetic counseling (...)
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  14. Emerging views of health: A challenge to rationalist doctrines of medical thought.William J. Lyddon - 1987 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 8 (3):365-94.
     
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  15.  17
    An Emerging Market: The Impact of User Selection on the Decision-Making Behavior of Mobile Medical Businesses in China.Xinglong Xu, Jiajia Wei, Lulin Zhou & Henry Asante Antwi - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    BackgroundUser selection is an important guarantee for the sustainable development of mobile medical businesses. Under the background of increasingly fierce competition, the decision-making behavior of mobile medical businesses will directly affect the choice of the behavior of users.MethodsThe study constructs the decision-making behavior model of mobile medical business based on the user choice and adds the role of people in government. It uses the game method to explore the relationship between the government, mobile medical business, and (...)
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  16.  17
    Medical research in clinical emergency settings in Europe.S. Lötjönen - 2002 - Journal of Medical Ethics 28 (3):183-187.
    Clinical emergencies necessitate immediate action to avert the danger to the patient's life or health. Emergency patients might be in greatest need of novel therapies, and even presumed willing to assume some risk, but research into emergency conditions should be conducted under commonly accepted principles that fulfil the scientific, ethical, and legal criteria. Such criteria already exist in the US, but are still under development in Europe.This article introduces criteria upon which trials in emergency settings may be ethically and (...)
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  17.  21
    Family refusal of emergency medical treatment in China: An investigation from legal, empirical and ethical perspectives.Pingyue Jin & Xinqing Zhang - 2020 - Bioethics 34 (3):306-317.
    This paper is an analysis of the limits of family authority to refuse life saving treatment for a family member (in the Chinese medical context). Family consent has long been praised and practiced in many non‐Western cultural settings such as China and Japan. In contrast, the controversy of family refusal remains less examined despite its prevalence in low‐income and middle‐income countries. In this paper, we investigate family refusal in medical emergencies through a combination of legal, empirical and (...)
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  18.  20
    Professional Medical Discourse and the Emergence of Practical Wisdom in Everyday Practices: Analysis of a Keyhole Case.Marij Bontemps-Hommen, Andries Baart & Frans Vosman - 2020 - Health Care Analysis 28 (2):137-157.
    Recent publications have argued that practical wisdom is increasingly important for medical practices, particularly in complex contexts, to stay focused on giving good care in a moral sense to each individual patient. Our empirical investigation into an ordinary medical practice was aimed at exploring whether the practice would reveal practical wisdom, or, instead, adherence to conventional frames such as guidelines, routines and the dominant professional discourse. We performed a thematic analysis both of the medical files of a (...)
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  19.  16
    The Cement of Medical Thought. Evolutionary Emergence and Downward Causation.Giovanni Felice Azzone - 1998 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 20 (2):163 - 187.
    The aetio-pathogenetic sequences and the physio-pathological patterns of diabetes, emphysema, cholera, circulatory shock and thrombosis have been analysed with respect to an evolutionary interpretation. The diseases, although reflecting alterations of processes that can always be described in physico-chemical language, occur only at the level of biological systems which reflects the decodification of genomic project: the teleonomic projects that have been developed during evolution. The concepts of evolutionary emergence and of downward causation have been used to discuss the relationship between the (...)
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  20. Emergency contraception: Balancing a patient's right to medication with a pharmacist's right of conscientious objection.H. E. Shacter - 2006 - Penn Bioethics Journal 2 (1):35-37.
     
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  21.  3
    Correction: Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) Care Coordination: Navigating Ethics and Access in the Emergence of a New Health Profession.Marta Simpson‑Tirone, Samantha Jansen & Marilyn Swinton - 2022 - HEC Forum 34 (4):483-485.
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  22. Social context and historical emergence: The underlying dimension of medical ethics.Eugenia M. Porto - 1990 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 11 (2).
    I argue that work in medical ethics which attempts to humanize medicine without examining hidden assumptions (about medicine's ontology, explanations, goals, relationships) has the dehumanizing effect of legitimating practices which treat persons as abstractions. After illustrating the need to reexamine the field of medical ethics and the doctor-patient relationship in particular, I use Foucault's work to provide a social, historical framework for discussion. This background begins to demonstrate that doctor-patient relationships cannot be made satisfactory by new hospital policies (...)
     
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  23.  5
    Emergency Contraception: Legal Consequences of Medical Classification.Elizabeth Gerber - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (2):428-431.
    Pharmacists with religious or ethical objections to prescribing emergency contraception won the latest round in the fight over conscience clauses in a case that could have broader implications for attempts to restrict access to contraception. In Stormans, Inc. v. Selecky, a federal District Court in Washington State granted an injunction to block the enforcement of regulations that would have forbidden pharmacists to refuse to dispense emergency contraception on the grounds of religious or ethical objections. In its decision, the court applied (...)
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  24.  28
    The emergence of species impartiality: a medical critique of biocentrism.Stephen G. Post - 1992 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 36 (2):289-300.
  25.  30
    On emergencies and emigration: how (not) to justify compulsory medical service.Michael Blake - 2017 - Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (8):566-567.
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  26.  42
    Crowdfunding for medical care: Ethical issues in an emerging health care funding practice.Jeremy Snyder - 2016 - Hastings Center Report 46 (6):36-42.
    Crowdfunding websites allow users to post a public appeal for funding for a range of activities, including adoption, travel, research, participation in sports, and many others. One common form of crowdfunding is for expenses related to medical care. Medical crowdfunding appeals serve as a means of addressing gaps in medical and employment insurance, both in countries without universal health insurance, like the United States, and countries with universal coverage limited to essential medical needs, like Canada. For (...)
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  27.  28
    Medical and dental emergencies and complications in dental practice and its management.Harshitha Alva, Chethan Hegde, KrishnaD Prasad & Manoj Shetty - 2012 - Journal of Education and Ethics in Dentistry 2 (1):13.
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  28.  25
    Digital twins running amok? Open questions for the ethics of an emerging medical technology.Daniel W. Tigard - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (6):407-408.
    Digital twinning in medicine refers to the idea of simulating a person’s organs, muscles or perhaps their entire body, in order to arrive more effectively at accurate diagnoses, to make treatment recommendations that reflect chances of success and possible side-effects, and to better understand the long-term trajectory of an individual’s overall condition. Digital twins, in these ways, build on the recent movement toward personalised medicine,1 and they undoubtedly present us with exciting opportunities to advance our health. Of course, the opportunities (...)
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  29.  23
    The emergence of problem‐based learning in medical education.Stephen M. Johnson & Paul M. Finucane - 2000 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 6 (3):281-291.
  30. Impact of Wireless Electronic Medical Record System on the Quality of Patient Documentation by Emergency Field Responders during a Disaster Mass-Casualty Exercise.David Kirsh - 2011 - Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 26 (4):268-275.
    The use of wireless, electronic, medical records and communications in the prehospital and disaster field is increasing. Objective: This study examines the role of wireless, electronic, medical records and com- munications technologies on the quality of patient documentation by emergency field responders during a mass-casualty exercise.
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  31. Advance directives for emergency medical service workers: the struggle continues.Dennis Sosna - 1998 - Bioethics Forum 14:1.
     
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  32.  8
    The Ethical Challenges of Emerging Medical Technologies.Arthur L. Caplan & Brendan Parent - 2016 - Routledge.
    This collection of essays emphasizes society s increasingly responsible engagement with ethical challenges in emerging medical technology. Expansion of technological capacity and attention to patient safety have long been integral to improving healthcare delivery but only relatively recently have concepts like respect, distributive justice, privacy, and autonomy gained some power to shape the development, use, and refinement of medical tools and techniques. Medical ethics goes beyond making better medicine to thinking about how to make the field of (...)
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  33.  26
    12 Unsuccessful Emergency Medical Resuscitation.-Are Continued Eflorts.William A. Gray & Robert I. Capone - forthcoming - Bioethics: Basic Writings on the Key Ethical Questions That Surround the Major, Modern Biological Possibilities and Problems.
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  34.  31
    Burnout Among Medical Staff 1 Year After the Beginning of the Major Public Health Emergency in Wuhan, China.Wenning Fu, Yifang Liu, Keke Zhang, Pu Zhang, Jun Zhang, Fang Peng, Xue Bai, Jing Mao & Li Zou - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    ObjectivesWuhan is the city where coronavirus disease was first reported and developed into a pandemic. However, the impact of the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic on medical staff burnout remains limited. We aimed to identify the prevalence and major determinants of burnout among medical staff 1 year after the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan, China.Materials and MethodsA total of 1,602 medical staff from three hospitals in Wuhan, China, were included from November 1–28, 2021. Chi-square tests were conducted (...)
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  35.  11
    The emergence of the “genetic counseling” profession as a counteraction to past eugenic concepts and practices.Shachar Zuckerman - 2021 - Bioethics 35 (6):528-539.
    The emergence of the genetic counseling profession has allowed laypeople to understand and benefit from biological advances, and to make critical decisions about their application. The discipline of genetic counseling has been criticized from its very beginning, in particular because of its early association with the eugenics movement. This paper presents a critical and reflective overview of how genetic counseling is implicitly embedded in the history of eugenics but also counteracts past eugenic practices and ideas. After World War II, attempts (...)
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  36. Existing and Emerging Capabilities in the Governance of Medical AI.Gilberto K. K. Leung, Yuechan Song & Calvin W. L. Ho - forthcoming - Asian Bioethics Review:1-5.
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  37.  30
    eHealth Ethics: The Online Medical Marketplace and Emerging Ethical Issues.Bryan Liang, Timothy K. Mackey & Kimberly M. Lovett - 2011 - Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine 2 (3):253-265.
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  38.  40
    The 9th annual INDUS-EM 2013 Emergency Medicine Summit, “Principles, Practices, and Patients,” a level one international meeting, Kerala University of Health Sciences and Jubilee Mission Medical College and Research Institute, Thrissur, Kerala, India, October 23–27, 2013. [REVIEW]Mamta Swaroop, Sagar C. Galwankar, Stanislaw P. A. Stawicki, Jayaraj M. Balakrishnan, Tamara Worlton, Ravi S. Tripathi, David P. Bahner, Sanjeev Bhoi, Colin Kaide & Thomas J. Papadimos - 2014 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 9:8.
    INDUS-EM is India’s only level one conference imparting and exchanging quality knowledge in acute care. Specifically, in general and specialized emergency care and training in trauma, burns, cardiac, stroke, environmental and disaster medicine. It provides a series of exchanges regarding academic development and implementation of training tools related to developing future academic faculty and residents in Emergency Medicine in India. The INDUS-EM leadership and board of directors invited scholars from multiple institutions to participate in this advanced educational symposium that was (...)
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  39.  29
    Ethical values in emergency medical services.Anders Bremer, María Jiménez Herrera, Christer Axelsson, Dolors Burjalés Martí, Lars Sandman & Gian Luca Casali - 2015 - Nursing Ethics 22 (8):928-942.
    Background:Ambulance professionals often address conflicts between ethical values. As individuals’ values represent basic convictions of what is right or good and motivate behaviour, research is needed to understand their value profiles.Objectives:To translate and adapt the Managerial Values Profile to Spanish and Swedish, and measure the presence of utilitarianism, moral rights and/or social justice in ambulance professionals’ value profiles in Spain and Sweden.Methods:The instrument was translated and culturally adapted. A content validity index was calculated. Pilot tests were carried out with 46 (...)
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  40.  26
    Developing a Triage Protocol for the COVID-19 Pandemic: Allocating Scarce Medical Resources in a Public Health Emergency.Mark R. Mercurio, Mark D. Siegel, John Hughes, Ernest D. Moritz, Jennifer Kapo, Jennifer L. Herbst, Sarah C. Hull, Karen Jubanyik, Katherine Kraschel, Lauren E. Ferrante, Lori Bruce, Stephen R. Latham & Benjamin Tolchin - 2020 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 31 (4):303-317.
    The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) has caused shortages of life-sustaining medical resources, and future waves of the virus may cause further scarcity. The Yale New Haven Health System developed a triage protocol to allocate scarce medical resources during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the primary goal of saving the most lives possible, and a secondary goal of making triage assessments and decisions consistent, transparent, and fair. We outline the process of developing the protocol, summarize the protocol, and discuss the major (...)
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  41.  25
    Systematic review and metasummary of attitudes toward research in emergency medical conditions.Alexander T. Limkakeng, Lucas Lentini Herling de Oliveira, Tais Moreira, Amruta Phadtare, Clarissa Garcia Rodrigues, Michael B. Hocker, Ross McKinney, Corrine I. Voils & Ricardo Pietrobon - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (6):401-408.
    Emergency departments are challenging research settings, where truly informed consent can be difficult to obtain. A deeper understanding of emergency medical patients’ opinions about research is needed. We conducted a systematic review and meta-summary of quantitative and qualitative studies on which values, attitudes, or beliefs of emergent medical research participants influence research participation. We included studies of adults that investigated opinions toward emergency medicine research participation. We excluded studies focused on the association between demographics or consent document features (...)
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  42.  20
    Phenomenological Bioethics: Medical Technologies, Human Suffering, and the Meaning of Being Alive.Fredrik Svenaeus - 2017 - New York: Routledge.
    This book brings phenomenology, the main player in the continental tradition of philosophy, to bioethics. Medical science and emerging technologies are examined as endeavours that bring enormous possibilities in relieving human suffering but also great risks in transforming our fundamental life views.
  43.  10
    Medical Genetics Casebook: A Clinical Introduction to Medical Ethics Systems Theory.Colleen D. Clements - 1982 - Springer Verlag.
    The Direction of Medical Ethics The direction bioethics, and specifically medical ethics, will take in the next few years will be crucial. It is an emerging specialty that has attempted a great deal, that has many differing agendas, and that has its own identity crisis. Is it a subspecialty of clinical medicine? Is it a medical reform movement? Is it a consumer pro tection movement? Is it a branch of professional ethics? Is it a ra tionale for (...)
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  44. The Medicalization of Love.Brian D. Earp, Anders Sandberg & Julian Savulescu - 2015 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 24 (3):323-336.
    Pharmaceuticals or other emerging technologies could be used to enhance (or diminish) feelings of lust, attraction, and attachment in adult romantic partnerships. While such interventions could conceivably be used to promote individual (and couple) well-being, their widespread development and/or adoption might lead to “medicalization” of human love and heartache—for some, a source of serious concern. In this essay, we argue that the “medicalization of love” need not necessarily be problematic, on balance, but could plausibly be expected to have either good (...)
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  45.  25
    What is wrong with the emergency justification of compulsory medical service?Eszter Kollar - 2017 - Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (8):560-561.
    Michael Blake holds that liberal states are precluded from introducing compulsory medical service to improve access to health care under conditions of critical health worker shortage. "Emergency circumstances" are the only exception when the suspension of liberty may be justified. I argue that there are three problems with Blake's emergency justification of compulsory service. First, his concept of emergency is vague. Second, his account does not really rely on emergency as much as liberty. Third, his conception of permissible restrictions (...)
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  46.  10
    A Pragmatic Trial for Emergency Medical Service Providers’ Prehospital Response to Suidality: Consent Is Not Essential, but Limited Patient Engagement May Be Meaningful.Neal W. Dickert - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (10):105-107.
    Volume 19, Issue 10, October 2019, Page 105-107.
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  47.  10
    Analysis of performance of medical college students with vegetative dysfunction in subject “anesthesiology and emergency medicine” on top of vitamin therapy.Guzun Sergey & Guzun Olga - 2016 - Science and Education: Academic Journal of Ushynsky University 10:39-45.
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  48.  19
    The ‘disabilitization’ of medicine: The emergence of Quality of Life as a space to interrogate the concept of the medical model.Arseli Dokumacı - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (5):164-190.
    This article presents an archaeological inquiry into the early histories of Quality of Life measures, and takes this as an occasion to rethink the concept of the ‘medical model of disability’. Focusing on three instruments that set the ground for the emergence of QoL measures, namely, the Karnofsky Performance Scale, and the classification of functional capacity as a diagnostic criterion for heart diseases and as a supplementary aid to therapeutic criteria in rheumatoid arthritis – I discuss how medicine, throughout (...)
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  49.  16
    The brain drain re-emergent: Foreign medical graduates in American Medical Schools. [REVIEW]Bruce L. R. Smith - 1979 - Minerva 17 (4):483-503.
  50.  30
    Medical diagnosis: an exemplar of diachronic inference?David Pilgrim - 2018 - Journal of Critical Realism 17 (5):449-465.
    ABSTRACTMedical diagnosis is sometimes used by critical realists and others as an exemplar of a form of inference across time in which a current empirical observation points backwards to the conditions of its emergence and forwards to a possible future outcome or progression. Accordingly, its practice warrants critical exploration to confirm its legitimacy as a philosophical reference point. The strengths and weakness of the exemplar are appraised using case brief case studies. The limitations of medical diagnosis are discussed in (...)
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