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  1. Challenging Themes in American Health Information Privacy and the Public’s Health: Historical and Modern Assessments.James G. Hodge & Kieran G. Gostin - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (4):670-679.
    Protecting the privacy of individually-identifiable health data is a dominant health policy objective in the new millennium. Technological, economic, and health-related reasons substantiate the development of a national electronic health information infrastructure. Through this emerging infrastructure, billions of pieces of health data of varying sensitivities are exchanged annually to provide health care services and service transactions, conduct health research, and promote the public’s health. These multi-purpose, rapid exchanges of electronic health data, far removed from the typical disclosure of health information (...)
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  • Surgical patients' and nurses' opinions and expectations about privacy in care.Elif Akyüz & Firdevs Erdemir - 2013 - Nursing Ethics 20 (6):660-671.
    The purpose of this study was to determine the opinions and expectations of patients and nurses about privacy during a hospital admission for surgery. The study explored what enables and maintains privacy from the perspective of Turkish surgical patients and nurses. The study included 102 adult patients having surgery and 47 nurses caring for them. Data were collected via semistructured questionnaire by face-to-face interviews. The results showed that patients were mostly satisfied by the respect shown to their privacy by the (...)
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  • Islamic Jurisprudence on Harm Versus Harm Scenarios in Medical Confidentiality.Sayyed Mohamed Muhsin - 2024 - HEC Forum 36 (2):291-316.
    Although medical confidentiality is widely recognized as an essential principle in the therapeutic relationship, its systematic and coherent practice has been an ethically challenging duty upon healthcare providers due to various concerns of clinical, moral, religious, social, ethical and legal natures. Medical confidentiality can be breached to protect the patient and/or others if maintaining confidentiality causes serious harm. Healthcare professionals may encounter complicated situations whereby the divulgence of a patient’s confidential information may pose a threat to one party whereas the (...)
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  • The legal and ethical fiction of "pure" confidentiality.James G. Hodge - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):21 – 22.
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