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  1. Book Review: Women and Prenatal Testing, Women and Prenatal Testing: Facing the Challenges of Genetic Technology. [REVIEW]Bethany Spielman - 1995 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (2):199-201.
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  • Ethics Education in Research Involving Human Beings in Undergraduate Medicine Curriculum in Brazil.Maria Rita Garbi Novaes, Dirce Guilhem, Elena Barragan & Stewart Mennin - 2012 - Developing World Bioethics 13 (3):163-168.
    Introduction The Brazilian national curriculum guidelines for undergraduate medicine courses inspired and influenced the groundwork for knowledge acquisition, skills development and the perception of ethical values in the context of professional conduct. Objective The evaluation of ethics education in research involving human beings in undergraduate medicine curriculum in Brazil, both in courses with active learning processes and in those with traditional lecture learning methodologies. Methods Curricula and teaching projects of 175 Brazilian medical schools were analyzed using a retrospective historical and (...)
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  • Ethics Consultation: The Least Dangerous Profession?Giles R. Scofield, John C. Fletcher, Albert R. Jonsen, Christian Lilje, Donnie J. Self & Judith Wilson Ross - 1993 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (4):417.
    Whether ethics is too important to be left to the experts or so important that it must be is an age-old question. The emergence of clinical ethicists raises it again, as a question about professionalism. What role clinical ethicists should play in healthcare decision making – teacher, mediator, or consultant – is a question that has generated considerable debate but no consensus.
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  • Autonomies in Interaction: Dimensions of Patient Autonomy and Non-adherence to Treatment.Ion Arrieta Valero - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:471183.
    In recent years, several studies have advocated the need to expand the concept of patient autonomy beyond the capacity to deliberate and make decisions regarding a specific medical intervention or treatment (decision-making or decisional autonomy). Arguing along the same lines, this paper proposes a multidimensional concept of patient autonomy (decisional, executive, functional, informative and narrative) and argues that determining the specific aspect of autonomy affected is the first step towards protecting or promoting (and respecting) patient autonomy. These different manifestations of (...)
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  • Between Morality and Repentance: Recapturing “Sin” for Bioethics.Corinna Delkeskamp-Hayes - 2005 - Christian Bioethics 11 (2):93-132.
    (2005). Between Morality and Repentance: Recapturing “Sin” for Bioethics. Christian Bioethics: Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 93-132.
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  • Patient autonomy for the management of chronic conditions: A two-component re-conceptualization.Aanand D. Naik, Carmel B. Dyer, Mark E. Kunik & Laurence B. McCullough - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (2):23 – 30.
    The clinical application of the concept of patient autonomy has centered on the ability to deliberate and make treatment decisions (decisional autonomy) to the virtual exclusion of the capacity to execute the treatment plan (executive autonomy). However, the one-component concept of autonomy is problematic in the context of multiple chronic conditions. Adherence to complex treatments commonly breaks down when patients have functional, educational, and cognitive barriers that impair their capacity to plan, sequence, and carry out tasks associated with chronic care. (...)
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  • Modern ideas about the object of scientific knowledge and bioethics.Oksana Petrushenko, Viktor Petrushenko & Oksana Chursinova - 2022 - Ethics and Bioethics (in Central Europe) 12 (1-2):53-59.
    The present article analyzes and outlines significant changes in ideas about the object of scientific knowledge in modern science. Special attention is paid to the transition to the paradigm of complexity, within which the object of scientific knowledge acquires a complex systemic character and remains in the same complex connections with systems of different levels. It is marked that such changes entail a number of methodological requirements, which are especially clearly manifested in modern theories of bioethics and its real practices. (...)
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  • The Hippocratic Bargain and Health Information Technology.Mark A. Rothstein - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (1):7-13.
    Since the fourth century, B.C.E., the Oath of Hippocrates has been the starting point in analyzing the obligations of physicians to protect the privacy and confidentiality interests of their patients. The pertinent provision of the Oath reads as follows: “What I may see or hear in the course of the treatment or even outside of the treatment in regard to the life of men, which on no account must be spread abroad, I will keep to myself, holding such things shameful (...)
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  • Phantom Tumors and Hysterical Women: Revising Our View of the Schloendorff Case.Paul A. Lombardo - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):791-801.
    Over the past thirty years, the doctrine of informed consent has become a focal point in discussions of medical ethics. The literature of informed consent explores the evolution of the principle of autonomy, purportedly emerging from the mists of 19th Century medical practice, and finding its earliest articulation in legal cases where wronged citizens asserted their rights against medical authority. A commonplace, if not obligatory, feature of that literature is a reference to the case of Mary Schloendorff and the opinion (...)
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  • Camouflage is no defence--a response to Kottow.D. Seedhouse - 1999 - Journal of Medical Ethics 25 (4):344-350.
    The author responds to Professor Kottow's criticisms, explaining numerous errors and misconceptions.
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  • Aproximación crítica a los problemas sociales de la muerte encefálica.Ricardo Hodelín Tablada - 2012 - Humanidades Médicas 12 (1):119-136.
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  • Placebo Orthodoxy in Clinical Research II: Ethical, Legal, and Regulatory Myths.Benjamin Freedman, Kathleen Cranley Glass & Charles Weijer - 1996 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (3):252-259.
    Placebo-controlled trials are held by many, including regulators at agencies like the United States Food and Drug Administration, to be the gold standard in the assessment of new medical interventions. Yet the use of placebo controls in clinical trials has been the focus of considerable controversy. In this two-part article, we challenge a number of common beliefs concerning the value of placebo controls. Part I critiques statistical and other scientific justifications for the use of placebo controls in clinical research. The (...)
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  • Bioethics and Sources of Law.P. Capitelli - 2008 - Global Bioethics 21 (1-4):33-47.
    The aim of the present paper is to verify the qualitative typologies of “prescriptive, jurisprudential and doctrinal positivization” of universal ethical values by reporting different contemporaneous juridical experiences. Particular attention is devoted to problems such as voluntary interruption of pregnancy, assisted reproduction, euthanasia and refusal of medical treatment.
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