Results for 'Delivery of Health Care trends'

982 found
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  1.  17
    The delivery of controversial services : Reproductive health and the ethical and religious directives.Maura A. Ryan - 2006 - In David E. Guinn (ed.), Handbook of bioethics and religion. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Cochran has argued that Catholic health care occupies a “unique place on the border of public and private life”. Catholic health care is accountable to both its religious and sacramental traditions and its public responsibilities. It is inevitable that “border skirmishes” will arise. Yet there is no single formula for suggesting what public-private collaboration should comprise or how conflicts between values ought to be resolved. It may be, as Cochran suggests, that increasingly bitter conflicts over widely (...)
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  2.  17
    Recognizing disparities in health care for children with special health care needs.Christie Crump - 2018 - Clinical Ethics 13 (3):112-119.
    IntroductionThere is a significant disparity in the United States between the health care received by children with special health care needs versus physically healthy children.ObjectiveThe objective of the paper is to show that children with special needs receive less than adequate health care overall. This disparity affects the quality of life for these children and influences their ability to live their lives to their full potential.MethodsResearch was conducted by examining multiple studies with a focus (...)
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  3.  37
    Trends in the perceived complexity of primary health care: a secondary analysis.David Katerndahl, Michael Parchman & Robert Wood - 2010 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 16 (5):1002-1008.
  4.  10
    Assessing Impacts of “Anti-Equity” Legislation on Health Care and Public Health Services.James G. Hodge, Erica N. White, Jennifer L. Piatt & Camille Laude - 2024 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 52 (1):172-177.
    A deluge of state “anti-equity” legislative bills seek to reverse prevailing trends in diversity, equity, and inclusion; withdraw protections of LGBTQ+ communities; and deny access to gender-based care for trans minors and adults. While the political and constitutional fate of these acts is undetermined, profound impacts on patients and their providers are already affecting the delivery of health care and public health services.
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  5.  20
    Ethical Integrity in Health Care Organizations: Currents in Contemporary Bioethics.Jessica Mantel - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (3):661-665.
    The rise of managed care initiated a steady decline in solo and small group physician practices and the emergence of new delivery models built around large health care organizations. Health care reform has only accelerated this trend as public and private payors shift to new payment methodologies that reward clinical and financial integration among providers. As a result, patients increasingly receive care from physicians and other health professionals organized into collaborative partnerships with (...)
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  6.  7
    The secret(s) of good patient care: thoughts on medicine in the 21st century.William Campbell Felch - 1996 - Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
    Not since William Carlos Williams' books early in this century has there been anything as thought-provoking and touching as Dr. Felch's account of the triumphs and heartaches of patient care.
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  7. Fairness in the allocation and delivery of health care: a case study in organ transplantation.James F. Childress - forthcoming - Practical Reasoning in Bioethics.
     
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  8.  77
    (1 other version)Book review of Introduction to U.S. Health Policy: The Organization, Financing and Delivery of Health Care in America by Donald A. Barr. [REVIEW]Audrey R. Chapman - 2008 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 3:9.
    Donald A. Barr's Introduction to U.S. Health Policy: The Organization, Financing, and Delivery of Health Care in America (second edition, 2007) offers a lucid and informative overview of the U.S. health system and the dilemmas policy makers currently face. Barr has provided a balanced introduction to the way health care is organized, financed, and delivered in the United States. The thirteen chapters of the book are quite comprehensive in the topics they cover. Even (...)
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  9. Principles of health care ethics.Richard E. Ashcroft (ed.) - 2007 - Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
    Edited by four leading members of the new generation of medical and healthcare ethicists working in the UK, respected worldwide for their work in medical ethics, Principles of Health Care Ethics, Second Edition_is a standard resource for students, professionals, and academics wishing to understand current and future issues in healthcare ethics. With a distinguished international panel of contributors working at the leading edge of academia, this volume presents a comprehensive guide to the field, with state of the art (...)
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  10.  30
    Christian Ethics and the Delivery of Health Care[REVIEW]Daniel P. Sulmasy - 1999 - Hastings Center Report 29 (5):42.
    Christians have considered the care of the sick to be a form of ministry ever since the time of Jesus. As Christians prepare to commemorate the second millenium of the birth of the founder of their religion, they cannot help but notice that health care is changing more than it ever has in the last 2,000 years. Nor can they help but notice that these changes threaten the notion that health care can be practiced as (...)
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  11.  38
    Managing Care in the New Era of “Systems-Think”: The Implications for Managed Care Organizational Liability and Patient Safety.Alice A. Noble & Troyen A. Brennan - 2001 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 29 (3-4):290-304.
    Three major trends in American health policy are intersecting in a fascinating way. First, managed care has grown to become the most dominant form of health-care delivery, leading to reductions in health-care costs as insurers are able to influence health-care providers with financial incentives. Second, the present growth of managed care has slowed, almost to a standstill, largely on account of consumers questioning what effects these financial incentives are having (...)
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  12.  43
    Market Structure, Claims Fraud and Ethical Concerns in the Delivery of Health Care Services: A Transaction Cost Economics Analysis.Robin T. Byerly & Henry W. Mannle - 2001 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 20 (2):23-45.
  13. Agency and the Organization of Health Care Delivery.W. D. White - 1987 - Inquiry (Misc) 24:405-415.
     
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  14.  11
    Prescriptions: the dissemination of medical authority.Gayle Ormiston & Raphael Sassower (eds.) - 1990 - New York: Greenwood Press.
    Redefining, redrawing, and resetting the respective domains of philosophy, medicine, and health care, this book provides a conceptual point of departure from which the radical changes that will be required of health care in the next century can be envisioned and acted upon. It provides critical analyses of the conceptual apparatus that informs the many dimensions of health care practices, challenging the fundamental relationships of authority that exist between patients and health care (...)
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  15.  18
    The delivery of health services as resistance.Ryan Essex - 2023 - Bioethics 37 (8):756-762.
    In this article, I will argue that the delivery of healthcare could be an act of resistance, that is, day‐to‐day, routine and perhaps mundane acts, undertaken in the course of the delivery of health services, which for many could also be considered otherwise routine care. I first consider how resistance has been conceptualised. How we understand resistance will determine if we believe healthcare could be conceptualised this way. I will show how resistance has been applied to (...)
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  16.  42
    Conceptualizing a Quality Plan for Healthcare: A Philosophical Reflection on the Relevance of the Health Profession to Society.S. Mehrdad Mohammadi, S. Farzad Mohammadi & Jerris R. Hedges - 2007 - Health Care Analysis 15 (4):337-361.
    Today, health systems around the world are under pressure to create greater value for patients and society [81, p. 1, 119]; increasing access, improving client orientation and responsiveness, reducing medical errors and safety, restraining utilization via managed care, and implementing priority allocation of resources for high-burden health problems are examples of strategies towards this end. The quality paradigm by virtue of its strategic consumer focus and its methods for achieving operational excellence has proved an effective approach for (...)
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  17.  18
    Culture, Health and Illness. By C. Helman. 2nd edn. Pp. 344.(Butterworth Scientific, Guildford, 1990.)£ 12.95 (paperback). This is a fascinating, though not flawless book. Dr Helman's aim is to convey the relevance of medical anthropology to health practitioners, in the hope that they might use such knowledge to improve their delivery of health care. To this end he. [REVIEW]Bernard Ineichen - forthcoming - Journal of Biosocial Science.
  18.  33
    Do Health Care Organizations Have Legitimate Responsibilities beyond the Delivery of Health Care? Insights from Citizenship Theory.Lauren A. Taylor, Folasade C. Lapite & Kelsey N. Berry - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (4):6-9.
    Many health care organizations made public commitments to become antiracist in the wake of George Floyd's murder. These actions raise questions about the appropriateness of health care's engagement in racial justice and social justice movements generally. We argue that health care organizations can be usefully thought of as having two roles: a functional role to care for the sick and a meta‐role as an organizational citizen. Fulfilling the role of citizen may require participating (...)
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  19.  19
    Patient, heal thyself: how the new medicine puts the patient in charge.Robert M. Veatch - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The puzzling case of the broken arm -- Hernias, diets, and drugs -- Why physicians cannot know what will benefit patients -- Sacrificing patient benefit to protect patient rights -- Societal interests and duties to others -- The new, limited, twenty-first-century role for physicians as patient assistants -- Abandoning modern medical concepts: doctor's "orders" and hospital "discharge" -- Medicine can't "indicate": so why do we talk that way? --"Treatments of choice" and "medical necessity": who is fooling whom? -- Abandoning informed (...)
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  20.  8
    What patients teach: the everyday ethics of health care.Larry R. Churchill - 2013 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Joseph B. Fanning & David Schenck.
    Being a patient and living a life -- Clinical space and traits of healing -- False starts and frequent failures -- Three journeys : A.'Ibuprofen and love', B. 'Staying tuned up', C. 'We all want the same things' -- Being a patient : the moral field -- Rethinking healthcare ethics : the patient's moral authority.
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  21. Synthetic Biology and IP: How Do Definitions of “Products of Nature” Affect their Implications for Health?David Koepsell - 2014 - In Iñigo de Miguel Beriain Carlos María Romeo Casabona (ed.), Synbio and Human Health. pp. 45-53.
    Currently, under the law of intellectual property, IP owners may exclude from use or production substances and processes that we would ordinarily consider to be products of nature. This has helped companies monopolize disease genes, and thus diagnostic testing for those diseases, and “biosimilar” products, pharmaceutical materials that mimic biological materials. Extending the current paradigm to the world of synthetic biology and nanotechnology will create further injustices in the delivery of health care to billions of people around (...)
     
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  22.  32
    Integrated delivery of primary health care for humans and animals.Calvin W. Schwabe - 1998 - Agriculture and Human Values 15 (2):121-125.
    Partially because of the high cost of developing and maintaining cold chains, systems needed to keep heat-labile vaccines under adequate refrigeration from their points of manufacture to their administration in the field, the Joint WHO/FAO Expert Committee on Zoonoses (i.e., the approximately four fifths of all described human infections that people share with other vertebrate animals) recommended in 1982 operation of common cold chains by health and veterinary services in rural areas. Following this recommendation, a 1984 pilot level initiative (...)
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  23.  37
    Priority setting in health care: trends and models from Scandinavian experiences. [REVIEW]Bjørn Hofmann - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (3):349-356.
    The Scandinavian welfare states have public health care systems which have universal coverage and traditionally low influence of private insurance and private provision. Due to raises in costs, elaborate public control of health care, and a significant technological development in health care, priority setting came on the public agenda comparatively early in the Scandinavian countries. The development of health care priority setting has been partly homogeneous and appears to follow certain phases. This (...)
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  24.  28
    Global Health Care Delivery: A Pandora’s Box of Ethical Issues.George Bugliarello - 2011 - Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine 2 (1):71-76.
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  25.  39
    Ethically Important Distinctions among Managed Care Organizations.Kate T. Christensen - 1995 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (3):223-229.
    Due to society's need to control health care costs and to the failure of legislated health care reform, managed care is expanding at a rapid rate and will soon be the predominate form of health care delivery. Plans by Congress to bring Medicare and Medicaid under managed care will further consolidate this trend. Barring some legislative fiat, managed care is here to stay.The term managed care describes a diverse set (...)
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  26.  51
    Racial groups, distrust, and the distribution of health care.Howard McGary - 2002 - In Rosamond Rhodes, Margaret P. Battin & Anita Silvers (eds.), Medicine and Social Justice:Essays on the Distribution of Health Care: Essays on the Distribution of Health Care. Oup Usa. pp. 212.
    This chapter examines the ways race should and should not affect the delivery of health care benefits in a system that is just. To show how race affects the distribution of health care, it highlights disquieting similarities between the infamous Tuskegee study of fifty years ago and contemporary public health efforts directed at reducing HIV infection/AIDS in the African-American community that may detract from the effectiveness of these programs. It argues that a just society’s (...)
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  27.  30
    Financial Planning for Health Care in Older Age: Implications for the Delivery of Health Services.John J. Regan - 1990 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 18 (3):274-281.
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  28.  6
    Managing complexity in healthcare.Lesley Kuhn & Kieran Le Plastrier (eds.) - 2022 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Managing Complexity in Healthcare introduces the ComEntEth (Complex Entropic Ethical) model as an integrated bio-medical and philosophical approach to understanding how people get things done in healthcare. Drawing on the complexity sciences, studies of entropy in living organisms, and the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas, healthcare is theorised as energetic relational exchanges between people as entropic and ethical entities that unfold around a central attractor: Reduction in elevated entropy or suffering in patients. Living entities are engaged in a continuous struggle against (...)
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  29.  35
    Health Care Voluntourism: Addressing Ethical Concerns of Undergraduate Student Participation in Global Health Volunteer Work.Daniel McCall & Ana S. Iltis - 2014 - HEC Forum 26 (4):285-297.
    The popularity and availability of global health experiences has increased, with organizations helping groups plan service trips and companies specializing in “voluntourism,” health care professionals volunteering their services through different organizations, and medical students participating in global health electives. Much has been written about global health experiences in resource poor settings, but the literature focuses primarily on the work of health care professionals and medical students. This paper focuses on undergraduate student involvement in (...)
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  30.  36
    Health care, human worth and the limits of the particular.C. Cherry - 1997 - Journal of Medical Ethics 23 (5):310-314.
    An ethics concerned with health care developments and systems must be historically continuous, especially as it concerns the application to managed structures of key moral-epistemic concepts such as care, love and empathy. These concepts are traditionally most at home in the personal, individual domain. Human beings have non-instrumental worth just because they are human beings and not by virtue of their capacities. Managed health care systems tend to abstract from this worth in respect of both (...)
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  31. The social determinants of health, care ethics and just health care.Daniel Engster - 2014 - Contemporary Political Theory 13 (2):149-167.
    Political theorists generally defend the moral importance of health care by appealing to its purported importance in promoting good health and saving lives. Recent research on the social determinants of health demonstrates, however, that health care actually does relatively little to promote good health or save lives in comparison with other social and environmental factors. This article assesses the implications of the social determinants of health literature for existing theories of health (...)
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  32.  93
    Contextualising Professional Ethics: The Impact of the Prison Context on the Practices and Norms of Health Care Practitioners.Karolyn L. A. White, Christopher F. C. Jordens & Ian Kerridge - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (3):333-345.
    Health care is provided in many contexts—not just hospitals, clinics, and community health settings. Different institutional settings may significantly influence the design and delivery of health care and the ethical obligations and practices of health care practitioners working within them. This is particularly true in institutions that are established to constrain freedom, ensure security and authority, and restrict movement and choice. We describe the results of a qualitative study of the experiences of (...)
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  33.  20
    Health Care Delivery.James K. Ribe - 1980 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 8 (4):33-33.
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  34.  30
    The religious foundations of health care: a conceptual approach.R. L. Sevensky - 1983 - Journal of Medical Ethics 9 (3):165-169.
    The relationship of religion and health is often misunderstood owing to a tendency to concentrate on the medical model and to ignore the wider context of heath care. A conceptual--as opposed to a historical--examination of this context reveals nine central religious ideas or categories which provide an ethical foundation and heritage for medical practice and health care delivery. These include doctrines of creation; dominion or stewardship; freedom and responsibility; human dignity or sanctity of life; love (...)
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  35.  58
    Tort Claims Analysis in the Veterans Health Administration for Quality Improvement.William B. Weeks, Tina Foster, Amy E. Wallace & Erik Stalhandske - 2001 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 29 (3-4):335-345.
    Tort claims have been studied for various reasons. Several studies have found that most tort claims are not related to negligent adverse events and most negligent adverse events do not result in tort claims. Several studies have examined the disposition of tort claims to understand the likelihood of payment once a claim has been made. Still others have proposed that tort-claims trend analysis may help administrators target their quality-improvement efforts and identify problems with quality that would not otherwise be captured.In (...)
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  36. Health care ethics: critical issues for the 21st century.Eileen E. Morrison & Rachel Ellison (eds.) - 2026 - Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
    Health Care Ethics: Critical Issues for the 21st Century is built around the four central themes of healthcare ethics: theoretical foundations, issues for individuals, issues for organizations, and issues for society. The text brings together the insights of a diverse panel of leading experts from the fields of bioethics, long-term care, and health administration, among others, and a comprehensive update of the ethics of pandemics.
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  37.  34
    Global Health Care Justice, Delivery Doctors and Assisted Reproduction: Taking a Note From Catholic Social Teachings.Cristina Richie - 2014 - Developing World Bioethics 15 (3):179-190.
    This article will examine the Catholic concept of global justice within a health care framework as it relates to women's needs for delivery doctors in the developing world and women's demands for assisted reproduction in the developed world. I will first discuss justice as a theory, situating it within Catholic social teachings. The Catholic perspective on global justice in health care demands that everyone have access to basic needs before elective treatments are offered to the (...)
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  38. Is Health Care an Example of Inclusiveness or a Space of General Exclusion?Kosma Kołodziej - 2024 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 15 (3).
    According to the Constitution of the Republic of Poland, every citizen has the right to health care. Unfortunately, some disadvantaged or minority groups have difficulties accessing a general practitioner, psychologist or other specialists in broader medical care. The article reviews scientific research on the issues outlined in the title using the following groups as examples: persons with a substance abuse disorder, the elderly, people with HIV or AIDS, immigrants, refugees and people from the LGBT community. For years, (...)
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  39.  11
    Holding Health Care Accountable: Law and the New Medical Marketplace.E. Haavi Morreim - 2001 - Oup Usa.
    Tort and contract law have not kept pace with the stunning changes in medicine's economics. Physicians are still expected to deliver the same standard of care to everyone, regardless whether it is paid for. Health plans increasingly face liability for unfortunate outcomes, even those stemming from society's mandate to keep costs down while improving population health. This book sorts through the chaos. After reviewing the inadequacies of current tort and contract law, Morreim proposes that an intelligent assignment (...)
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  40.  46
    Health care ethics: critical issues for the 21st century.Eileen E. Morrison & Elizabeth Furlong (eds.) - 2019 - Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
    Theory of health care ethics -- Principles of health care ethics -- The moral status of gametes and embryos : storage and surrogacy -- The ethical challenges of the new reproductive technology -- Ethics and aging in America -- -- Healthcare ethics committees : roles, memberships, structure, and difficulties -- Ethics in the management of health information systems -- Technological advances in health care : blessing or ethics nightmare? -- Ethics and safe patient (...)
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  41. Conscientious Objection in Health Care: An Ethical Analysis.Mark R. Wicclair - 2011 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    Historically associated with military service, conscientious objection has become a significant phenomenon in health care. Mark Wicclair offers a comprehensive ethical analysis of conscientious objection in three representative health care professions: medicine, nursing and pharmacy. He critically examines two extreme positions: the 'incompatibility thesis', that it is contrary to the professional obligations of practitioners to refuse provision of any service within the scope of their professional competence; and 'conscience absolutism', that they should be exempted from performing (...)
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  42.  26
    Guest editorial: Care not criminalisation; reform of British abortion law is long overdue.Sally Sheldon & Jonathan Lord - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (8):523-524.
    Megan1 is a young teenage patient who suffered a stillbirth at 28 weeks, leading to a year long police investigation dropped only after postmortem tests found that her pregnancy was lost due to natural causes. The stress of the investigation and her isolation from friends and support network following the seizure of her mobile and laptop compounded the trauma of the stillbirth, leaving her requiring emergency psychiatric care. Aisha1 is a vulnerable patient who suffered a premature delivery, having (...)
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  43.  32
    Protecting the Free Exercise of Religion in Health Care Delivery.Christine A. O’Riley - 2017 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 17 (3):425-434.
    Not all actions that are legal are necessarily morally correct. However, there are few protections for providers who are pressured to comply with actions and procedures that infringe on their religious beliefs regarding human dignity. The right of health care providers to freely act on religious convictions and refrain from cooperating with morally reprehensible tasks is often eschewed in favor of political correctness or is branded as discrimination. Adequate safeguards are urgently needed for health care workers (...)
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  44.  26
    The Goals of Medicine: The Forgotten Issues in Health Care Reform.Mark J. Hanson & Daniel Callahan - 2000 - Georgetown University Press.
    Debates over health care have focused for so long on economics that the proper goals for medicine seem to be taken for granted; yet problems in health care stem as much from a lack of agreement about the goals and priorities of medicine as from the way systems function. This book asks basic questions about the purposes and ends of medicine and shows that the answers have practical implications for future health care delivery, (...)
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  45.  33
    Conscience in Reproductive Health Care: Prioritizing Patient Interests.Carolyn McLeod - 2020 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Conscience in Reproductive Health Care responds to the growing worldwide trend of health care professionals conscientiously refusing to provide abortions and similar reproductive health services in countries where these services are legal and professionally accepted. Carolyn McLeod argues that conscientious objectors in health care should prioritize the interests of patients in receiving care over their own interest in acting on their conscience. She defends this "prioritizing approach" to conscientious objection over the more (...)
  46.  35
    Conscientious object in nursing: Regulations and practice in two European countries.Beata Dobrowolska, Ian McGonagle, Anna Pilewska-Kozak & Ros Kane - 2020 - Nursing Ethics 27 (1):168-183.
    Background: The concept of conscientious objection is well described; however, because of its nature, little is known about real experiences of nursing professionals who apply objections in their practice. Extended roles in nursing indicate that clinical and value-based dilemmas are becoming increasingly common. In addition, the migration trends of the nursing workforce have increased the need for the mutual understanding of culturally based assumptions on aspects of health care delivery. Aim: To present (a) the arguments for (...)
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  47. Health Care Ethics Consultation: An Update on Core Competencies and Emerging Standards from the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities’ Core Competencies Update Task Force.Anita J. Tarzian & Asbh Core Competencies Update Task Force 1 - 2013 - American Journal of Bioethics 13 (2):3-13.
    Ethics consultation has become an integral part of the fabric of U.S. health care delivery. This article summarizes the second edition of the Core Competencies for Health Care Ethics Consultation report of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities. The core knowledge and skills competencies identified in the first edition of Core Competencies have been adopted by various ethics consultation services and education programs, providing evidence of their endorsement as health care ethics consultation (...)
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  48.  43
    The impact of economic recession on healthcare and the contribution by nurses to promote individuals' dignity.Sofia Nunes, Guilhermina Rego & Rui Nunes - 2015 - Nursing Inquiry 22 (4):285-295.
    The health sector is facing many challenges, and there is a need to maintain the delivery of high‐quality healthcare. Issues related to equity and access to healthcare have emerged in a context of an economic recession in which the sustainability of the health system depends on everyone, including the actions and decisions of professionals. Therefore, nurses and their skills may be the answer to ethical, professional and community health management, but this recession (...)
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  49.  69
    Personal Privacy in the Health Care System: Employer-Sponsored Insurance, Managed Care, and Integrated Delivery Systems.Larry Ogalthorpe Gostin - 1997 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 7 (4):361-376.
    : Widespread collection and use of identifiable information can promote social goods while, at the same time, infringing on personal privacy. Information systems are developing within the context of a fundamental transformation in the organization, delivery, and financing of health care. Changes in the health care system include rapid development of employer-sponsored health coverage, managed care organizations, and integrated delivery systems. These complex, multifaceted arrangements for delivering and paying for health (...) require ever-more-sophisticated information systems that facilitate extensive sharing of personal data. Systemic flows of sensitive health information occur both vertically and horizontally among employers, hospitals, insurers, laboratories, and suppliers. Beyond this complex web of vertical and horizontal sharing are the multiple demands for information management, quality assurance, research, governmental regulation, and public health. Theoretical problems exist with the law and ethics of informational privacy. The traditional method of exercising control over personal health information is through informed consent. Informed consent, however, within a modern health information infrastructure becomes highly complex. In this kind of environment, the doctrine of informed consent is flawed and does not provide sufficient control over personal information to assure adequate protection of privacy. (shrink)
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  50.  38
    Descriptive study of association between quality of care and empathy and burnout in primary care.Oriol Yuguero, Josep Ramon Marsal, Miquel Buti, Montserrat Esquerda & Jorge Soler-González - 2017 - BMC Medical Ethics 18 (1):54.
    The doctor-patient relationship is a crucial aspect of primary-care practice Research on associations between quality of care provision and burnout and empathy in a primary care setting could improve this relationship. Cross-sectional study of family physicians and nurses of twenty-two primary care centers in the health district of Lleida, Spain. Empathy and burnout were measured using the Jefferson Physician Empathy Scale and the Maslach Burnout Inventory, while quality of care delivery was evaluated using (...)
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