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  1. Health: The Foundations for Achievement.David Seedhouse - 2001 - Wiley.
    This inspirational book provides the philosophical backbone tocountless courses for health professionals. It poses twofundamental questions - "What is health?" and "How can more healthbe achieved?" - and answers them at a depth unmatched by any othertext in this field. David Seedhouse shows that these questions lieat the heart of health practice, and explains why all healthworkers should ponder them deeply. This second edition retains the freshness and enthusiasm of thefirst, while making the foundations theory and its practicalapplications clearer and (...)
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  • Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education.Nel Noddings - 1984 - University of California Press.
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Among Those Who helped greatly in the initial stages of this project by making constructive suggestions on my first "caring" papers are Nick Burbules, William Doll, Bruce Fuller, Brian Hill, William Pinar, Mary Anne ...
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  • Liberating Medicine.David Seedhouse - 1991 - John Wiley & Son.
    Liberating Medicine David Seedhouse Unit for the Study of Health Care Ethics, Department of General Practice, University of Liverpool, UK Amid the increasing debate about the practice of medicine and the delivery of health care lie certain fundamental questions: What is the purpose of medicine? What is the role of the medical profession? and Where should the limits of medical intervention be set? In a world of rapid scientific and technological advance, public expectations place increasing demands on the doctor’s skills, (...)
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  • Health Promotion: Philosophy, Prejudice and Practice.Dr David Seedhouse - 2004 - Wiley.
    Incisively written, this new edition of a popular guide first published in 1996 slices through the rhetoric of health promotion. Its penetrating analysis quickly reveals health promotion’s conceptual roots, providing an enlightening map of their web of theory and practice. David Seedhouse proves that health promotion, a discipline intended to improve the health of a population, is prejudiced—every plan and every project stems first from human values—and argues that only by acknowledging this will a mature discipline emerge. To help speed (...)
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  • Two paradoxes of caring: A response to gorovitz. [REVIEW]Jan Reed - 1994 - Health Care Analysis 2 (3):217-220.
    The notion of caring is extremely problematic in the way that it is defined, practised and promoted. In response to Gorovitz I have attempted to go beyond the discussion of how health care workers can promote care at an organisational level, and look at some of the paradoxical elements of caring as it is currently being described. These paradoxes arise, in part, from the current emphasis on individualism in Western society which has made the notion of ‘mass care’ unacceptable because (...)
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  • Nursing Analysis.Judy Lucas - 1993 - Health Care Analysis 1 (2):179-182.
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  • Nursing analysis.Judy Lucas - 1993 - Health Care Analysis 1 (1):81-85.
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  • Is caring a viable component of health care?Samuel Gorovitz - 1994 - Health Care Analysis 2 (2):129-133.
    The attitudes and behaviours that constitute caring affect both the quality of the patient's experience and the outcomes of medical care. They can be identified and can be nurtured or discouraged by the structures of organisation and financing within which health care is provided. They have costs, so their viability is threatened as pressures increase to make health care more economically efficient. Yet the value of caring behaviour may justify what is necessary to sustain it. This issue deserves prompt and (...)
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  • To the uninformed: managed care means damaged ethics.Sandra Coney - 1997 - Health Care Analysis 5 (3):252-258.
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  • Open letter: To the uninformed: Managed care means damaged ethics.Sandra Coney - 1997 - Health Care Analysis 5 (3):252-258.
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  • Can there be an ethics of care?P. Allmark - 1995 - Journal of Medical Ethics 21 (1):19-24.
    There is a growing body of writing, for instance from the nursing profession, espousing an approach to ethics based on care. I suggest that this approach is hopelessly vague and that the vagueness is due to an inadequate analysis of the concept of care. An analysis of 'care' and related terms suggests that care is morally neutral. Caring is not good in itself, but only when it is for the right things and expressed in the right way. 'Caring' ethics assumes (...)
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