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  1. To Tell or Not to Tell: Hiv Disclosure to Family Members in China.Li Li, Chunqing Lin, Zunyou Wu, Lynwood Lord & Sheng Wu - 2008 - Developing World Bioethics 8 (3):235-241.
    Laws in China relating to HIV disclosure are inconsistent. After a patient has tested HIV‐positive, service providers struggle to decide who should be informed first: patients, family members, or both. To understand service providers' attitudes and practices regarding the HIV notification process in China, 1101 service providers from a southwestern province of China were surveyed. Opinions were gathered from providers at five different levels of health care facilities (provincial, city, county, township and village). A mixed methods approach was used to (...)
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  • The Risks of Absolute Medical Confidentiality.M. A. Crook - 2013 - Science and Engineering Ethics 19 (1):107-122.
    Some ethicists argue that patient confidentiality is absolute and thus should never be broken. I examine these arguments that when critically scrutinised, become porous. I will explore the concept of patient confidentiality and argue that although, this is a very important medical and bioethical issue, this needs to be wisely delivered to reduce third party harm or even detriment to the patient. The argument for absolute confidentiality is particularly weak when it comes to genetic information and inherited disease.
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  • Are Survivalists Unable to Answer Their Critics?Keith Augustine - 2024 - The Secular Web.
    In the last quarter of 2024 four articles on survival after death were published online ahead of print in the International Review of Psychiatry. Two of these included gratuitous attempts to discredit the work of a well-known survival critic. After correcting these misrepresentations, in this response Keith Augustine lays out how those who appeal to survival research to support their beliefs bungle their purportedly scientific assessments of the evidence concerning whether or not individual human minds survive death in a discarnate (...)
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  • Medical confidentiality and protection of third party interests.Elaine Gibson - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):23 – 25.
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  • A Defense Defended.Kenneth Kipnis - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):W32-W34.
    It is broadly held that confidentiality may be breached when doing so can avert grave harm to a third party. This essay challenges the conventional wisdom. Neither legal duties, personal morality nor personal values are sufficient to ground professional obligations. A methodology is developed drawing on core professional values, the nature of professions, and the justification for distinct professional obligations. Though doctors have a professional obligation to prevent public peril, they do not honor it by breaching confidentiality. It is shown (...)
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  • A qualified defense of legal disclosure requirements.Jessica Berg - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):25 – 26.
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