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  1. Cybermedicine and the moral integrity of the physician–patient relationship.Keith Bauer - 2004 - Ethics and Information Technology 6 (2):83-91.
    Some critiques of cybermedicine claim that it is problematic because it fails to create physician–patient relationships. But, electronically mediated encounters do create such relationships. The issue is the nature and quality of those relationships and whether they are conducive to good patient care and meet the ethical ideals and standards of medicine. In this paper, I argue that effective communication and compassion are, in most cases, necessary for the establishment of trusting and morally appropriate physician–patient relationships. The creation of these (...)
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  • Cancer and the computerized family: towards a clinical ethics of “indirect” Internet use. [REVIEW]Christian Simon & Sarah Schramm - 2008 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 11 (3):337-341.
    The normative dimensions of Internet use among patients and their families have not been studied in much depth in the field of clinical ethics. This study considers cancer-related Internet use among families and friends of cancer patients, and how that use of the Internet may affect patients and patient care. Interviews were conducted with 120 cancer patients, most of whom (76%) reported that family, friends, and others in their social network used the Internet in some way related to the patient’s (...)
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