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  1. Moral perception, educational environment, and development of medical professionalism in medical students during the clinical rotations in Peru.Montserrat San-Martín, Edgar M. Rivera, Adelina Alcorta-Garza & Luis Vivanco - 2016 - International Journal of Ethics Education 1 (2):163-172.
    The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between a clinical environment and the development of empathy, teamwork, and lifelong learning in medical students who are doing their first clinical rotation. The Jefferson Scales of Empathy, Jefferson Scale of Attitudes toward Physician-Nurse Collaboration, and Jefferson Scale of Physician Lifelong Learning were administered to 60 sixth-year medical students, before and after their first clinical rotation in five health care institutions. The Dundee Ready Education Environment Measure questionnaire was administered to (...)
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  • What is called symptom?Thor Eirik Eriksen & Mette Bech Risør - 2014 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 17 (1):89-102.
    There is one concept in medicine which is prominent, the symptom. The omnipresence of the symptom seems, however, not to be reflected by an equally prominent curiosity aimed at investigating this concept as a phenomenon. In classic, traditional or conventional medical diagnostics and treatment, the lack of distinction with respect to the symptom represents a minor problem. Faced with enigmatic conditions and their accompanying labels such as chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, medically unexplained symptoms, and functional somatic syndromes, the contestation of (...)
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  • About signs and symptoms: Can semiotics expand the view of clinical medicine?John Nessa - 1996 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 17 (4).
    Semiotics, the theory of sign and meaning, may help physicians complement the project of interpreting signs and symptoms into diagnoses. A sign stands for something. We communicate indirectly through signs, and make sense of our world by interpreting signs into meaning. Thus, through association and inference, we transform flowers into love, Othello into jealousy, and chest pain into heart attack. Medical semiotics is part of general semiotics, which means the study of life of signs within society. With special reference to (...)
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