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  1. Organisational failure: rethinking whistleblowing for tomorrow’s doctors.Daniel James Taylor & Dawn Goodwin - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (10):672-677.
    The duty to protect patient welfare underpins undergraduate medical ethics and patient safety teaching. The current syllabus for patient safety emphasises the significance of organisational contribution to healthcare failures. However, the ongoing over-reliance on whistleblowing disproportionately emphasises individual contributions, alongside promoting a culture of blame and defensiveness among practitioners. Diane Vaughan’s ‘Normalisation of Deviance’ provides a counterpoise to such individualism, describing how signals of potential danger are collectively misinterpreted and incorporated into the accepted margins of safe operation. NoD is an (...)
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  • Rules and Resistance: A Commentary on “An Archeology of Corruption in Medicine”.Kathryn MacKay - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (1):123-127.
    In the paper “An archeology of corruption in medicine”, Miles Little, Wendy Lipworth, and Ian Kerridge present an account of corruption and describe its prevalent forms in medicine. In presenting an individual-focused account of corruption found within “social entities”, Little et al. argue that these entities are corruptible by nature and that certain individuals are prone to take advantage of the corruptibility of social entities to pursue their own ends. The authors state that this is not preventable, so the way (...)
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