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  1. Islam and palliative care.K. A. Choong - 2015 - Global Bioethics 26 (1):28-42.
    Palliative care is experiencing an upsurge in interest and importance. This is driven, paradoxically, by modern medicine's increased ability to provide effective pain relief on the one hand and an acknowledgement of its limitation in delivering a cure for certain diseases on the other. With many Muslims suffering from such incurable diseases worldwide, they too are now faced with the decision of whether to avail themselves of pain relief offered within the framework of scientific medicine. However, while the general ethos (...)
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  • Truth-telling in health care.Anne Slowther - 2009 - Clinical Ethics 4 (4):173-175.
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  • Education in care ethics: a way to increase palliative care awareness in India.Joris Gielen - 2015 - International Journal of Ethics Education 1 (1):15-24.
    In India, the private healthcare sector is rapidly growing. The focus on profit and curative treatment in this sector carries the danger of overtreatment and lack of attention to types of care where the margin of profit is limited, such as palliative care. Since further expansion of the private healthcare sector is unavoidable and even necessary due to limited government spending on healthcare in India, ways to promote palliative care awareness in such an environment need to be found. An important (...)
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