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  1. Ethics and Rural Healthcare: What Really Happens? What Might Help?Ann Freeman Cook & Helena Hoas - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (4):52-56.
    Relatively few articles discuss the ethical issues that accompany healthcare in rural areas. This article presents and discusses the key findings obtained from multi-method research studies conducted over a 9-year period of time in a multi-state rural area. It challenges the efficacy of current models for bioethics, shows what kinds of ethical issues develop in rural communities, and offers a framework for envisioning resources and approaches that may be more appropriate.
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  • A proposed rural healthcare ethics agenda.W. Nelson, A. Pomerantz, K. Howard & A. Bushy - 2007 - Journal of Medical Ethics 33 (3):136-139.
    The unique context of the rural setting provides special challenges to furnishing ethical healthcare to its approximately 62 million inhabitants. Although rural communities are widely diverse, most have the following common features: limited economic resources, shared values, reduced health status, limited availability of and accessibility to healthcare services, overlapping professional–patient relationships and care giver stress. These rural features shape common healthcare ethical issues, including threats to confidentiality, boundary issues, professional–patient relationship and allocation of resources. To date, there exists a limited (...)
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  • The Opportunities and Challenges for Shared Decision-Making in the Rural United States.William A. Nelson, Paul J. Barr & Mary G. Castaldo - 2015 - HEC Forum 27 (2):157-170.
    The ethical standard for informed consent is fostered within a shared decision-making process. SDM has become a recognized and needed approach in health care decision-making. Based on an ethical foundation, the approach fosters the active engagement of patients, where the clinician presents evidence-based treatment information and options and openly elicits the patient’s values and preferences. The SDM process is affected by the context in which the information exchange occurs. Rural settings are one context that impacts the delivery of health care (...)
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  • Multi-Institutional Ethics Committees: For Rural Hospitals, and Urban Ones Too.Thaddeus Mason Pope - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (4):69-71.
    Cook and Hoas (2008) have identified and illustrated serious shortcomings in rural bioethics and healthcare decision-making. Some of the problems that the authors discuss are unique to the rural co...
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  • Re-framing the question: What do we really want to know about rural healthcare ethics?Ann Freeman Cook & Helena Hoas - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):51 – 53.
    A few weeks ago, a rural hospital administrator phoned with a question posed by his management team. “If you were going to give us some ethics resources,” he queried, “just exactly what would they...
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  • Preventive Ethics and Rural Healthcare: Addressing Issues on a Systems Level.Anthony Vernillo - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (4):61-62.
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