Results for 'hospitals'

982 found
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  1.  18
    Social Democracy, Cosmopolitan Hospitality, and Intercivilizational Peace.Cosmopolitan Hospitality - 2010 - In Maurice Hamington, Feminist Interpretations of Jane Addams. Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 223.
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  2.  2
    Agent-Regret and Clinical Realities: Responding to the “Nearly-Faultless Harmer”.Laura Kolbe A. Weill Cornell Medical Collegeb NewYork-Presbyterian Brooklyn Methodist Hospital - 2025 - American Journal of Bioethics 25 (2):23-25.
    Volume 25, Issue 2, February 2025, Page 23-25.
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  3.  12
    Moral Distress and Moral Stress Among Nurses Facing Challenges in a Health Care System Under Pressure.Belinda Mandrell Jacklyn Boggs Jami Gattuso Mary Caples Kimberly E. Sawyer Arshia Madni Liza-Marie Johnson A. St Jude Children'S. Research Hospitalb Texas Children'S. Hospital - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (12):48-51.
    Volume 24, Issue 12, December 2024, Page 48-51.
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  4.  6
    Death Is Too High a Price to Pay for Being Born an Impoverished and Ill Child.Cynthia C. Coleman Inova Fairfax Hospital - 2025 - American Journal of Bioethics 25 (2):145-148.
    Volume 25, Issue 2, February 2025, Page 145-148.
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  5.  7
    Navigating Tensions Between Law and Ethics in Surrogate Decision Making.Ryan H. Nelson Abbott Northwestern Hospital - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (7):127-128.
    Volume 24, Issue 7, July 2024, Page 127-128.
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  6. A Patient's Bill of Rights.Tom L. Beauchamp, Walters LeRoy & American Hospital Association - forthcoming - Contemporary Issues in Bioethics (Belmont, Ca: Wadsworth Publishing Company,) 5th.
     
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  7.  15
    Corrigendum: Pictorial Campaigns on Intimate Partner Violence Focusing on Victimized Men: A Systematic Content Analysis.Eduardo Reis, Patrícia Arriaga, Carla Moleiro & Xavier Hospital - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  8.  10
    Distinguishing Moral Stress from Moral Distress: Moving Beyond the Individual to Expose the Systemic Ethical Challenges.Lucia D. Wocial MedStar Washington Hospital Center - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (12):51-53.
    Volume 24, Issue 12, December 2024, Page 51-53.
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  9.  7
    Moral Stress and Moral Distress in a Novel Space of Virtual Healthcare.Marija Kirjanenko Plunkett Centre for Ethics, Northern Health Vved & Eastern Health Box Hill Hospital - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (12):71-73.
    Volume 24, Issue 12, December 2024, Page 71-73.
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  10.  16
    Pictorial Campaigns on Intimate Partner Violence Focusing on Victimized Men: A Systematic Content Analysis.Eduardo Reis, Patrícia Arriaga, Carla Moleiro & Xavier Hospital - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:519285.
    Men who are victimized in their intimate different-sex (DS) and same-sex (SS) relationships often report not having information to help them escape their abusive situations. To overcome this lack of information, public awareness campaigns have been created. But thus far, there is no clear understanding of how these campaigns reflect theoretical principles central to improve message effectiveness and avoid undesired negative effects. This study aims to review the content of intimate partner violence (IPV) pictorial campaigns focusing on victimized men in (...)
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  11. Of hospitality.Jacques Derrida - 2000 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. Edited by Anne Dufourmantelle.
    These two lectures by Jacques Derrida, 'Foreigner Question: Come from Abroad' and 'Step of Hospitality/No Hospitality', derive from a series of seminars on 'hospitality' conducted by Derrida in Paris, January 1996. The book consists of two texts on facing pages. 'Invitation' by Anne Dufourmantelle appears on the left clarifying and inflecting Derrida's 'response' on the right. The interaction between them not only enacts the 'hospitality' under discussion, but preserves something of the rhythms of teaching. The book also characteristically combines careful (...)
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  12.  14
    Disestablishing Hospitals.Elizabeth Sepper & James D. Nelson - 2021 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 49 (4):542-551.
    We argue that concentration of power in religious hospitals threatens disestablishment values. When hospitals deny care for religious reasons, they dominate patients’ bodies and convictions. Health law should — and to some extent already does — constrain such religious domination.
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  13. Hospital Clinical Ethics Committees. The Geneva Experience - Switzerland.Jean-Claude Chevrolet & Bara Ricou - 2009 - Diametros 22:21-38.
    Hospital ethics committees were created in the United States of America in the 1970s. Their aims were the education of the hospital personnel in the field of ethics, the development of policies and the publication of guidelines concerning ethical issues, as well as consultations and case reviews of hospitalized patients when an ethical concern was present. During the last thirty years, these committees disseminated, particularly in Western Europe. In this manuscript, we describe the benefit, but also some difficulties with these (...)
     
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  14.  13
    Hospitality.Jacques Derrida - 2023 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Pascale-Anne Brault, Peggy Kamuf & E. S. Burt.
    In Hospitality, Volume I, Jacques Derrida continues a seminar series he inaugurated in 1991 under the general title of "Questions of Responsibility." Delivered at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris from November 1995 through June 1996, the seminar is guided by questions that focus on responsibility and "the foreigner": How is the foreigner welcomed and/or repressed? What does the notion of the foreigner reveal about kinship, ethnicity, the city, the state, and the nation? What are (...)
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  15.  56
    Hospitality to the stranger: dimensions of moral understanding.Thomas W. Ogletree - 1985 - Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press.
    PROLOGUE: HOSPITALITY TO THE STRANGER AS METAPHOR FOR THE MORAL LIFE You shall not oppress a stranger; you know the heart of a stranger, ...
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  16. Catholic Hospitals Should Permit Physicians to Provide Emergency Contraception to Rape Victims as an Act of Conscientious Provision.Abram Brummett, Marlee Mason-Maready & Victoria Whiting - 2022 - The Linacre Quarterly.
    While many Catholic hospitals permit the prescription of the emergency contraception drug levonorgestrel for rape victims, some continue to prohibit this practice as a matter of institutional conscience. While the standard approach to this issue has been to offer an argument that levonorgestrel either is or is not morally permissible, we have taken a different tack. We begin by briefly describing and acknowledging that reasonable disagreement exists on this question (part one), and then arguing that the reasonable disagreement itself (...)
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  17.  39
    Hospital Ethics Committees in Poland.Marek Czarkowski, Katarzyna Kaczmarczyk & Beata Szymańska - 2015 - Science and Engineering Ethics 21 (6):1525-1535.
    According to UNESCO guidelines, one of the four forms of bioethics committees in medicine are the Hospital Ethics Committees. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how the above guidelines are implemented in real practice. There were 111 hospitals selected out of 176 Polish clinical hospitals and hospitals accredited by Center of Monitoring Quality in Health System. The study was conducted by the survey method. There were 56 hospitals that responded to the survey. The number (...)
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  18.  14
    Hospitality, ethics of care and the traditionist feminism of Beit Midrash Arevot.Angy Cohen - 2020 - Approaching Religion 10 (2).
    This is an exploration of women’s tradition of hospitality, the epistemic and moral contribution of their practices of welcoming the other and their historical experience as providers of care. The essay claims that female hospitality has largely consisted of care for others, which challenges a social model based on individualism and self-sufficiency. The argument is rooted in ethnography and Jewish thought and reclaims the home as an ethical space. This text analyses two disturbing and painful stories from the Tanakh that (...)
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  19.  17
    Hospitality and Identitarian Tensions.Andreas Gonçalves Lind, Bruno Nobre, João Carlos Onofre Pinto & Ricardo Barroso Batista - 2023 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 78 (4):1195-1202.
    The imperative to practice hospitality constitutes a mark of Western civilization. Already in Homer’s Odyssey, the hero Ulysses punishes Polyphemus for not having respected the obligation of hospitality towards him and his companions. In fact, hospitality has been a constitutive element of the West, marked by linguistic, cultural, and religious differences, in a world whose borders are supposed to be well defined. In his discussion of hospitality, Derrida shows how Socrates, in Plato’s dialogue The Apology of Socrates, places himself in (...)
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  20.  42
    Linguistic Hospitality—The Risk of Translation.Richard Kearney - 2019 - Research in Phenomenology 49 (1):1-8.
    This essay examines the recent critical debate on the hermeneutics of hospitality. It explores the philosophical and ethical implications of Paul Ricoeur’s notion of linguistic hospitality as a translation between host and guest, enemy and friend, and compares it to Derrida’s notion of impossible hospitality.
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  21.  9
    Hospitals: N.Y. Appellate Court Denies Move to Privatize Public Hospital.Robert Chatham - 1999 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (2):202-203.
    The Court of Appeals of New York held, in Council of the City of New York u. Giuliani, slip op. 02634, 1999 WL 179257, that New York City may not privatize a public city hospital without state statutory authorization. The court found invalid a sublease of a municipal hospital operated by a public benefit corporation to a private, for-profit entity. The court reasoned that the controlling statute prescribed the operation of a municipal hospital as a government function that must be (...)
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  22.  30
    The hospital as a place of pain.D. W. Vere - 1980 - Journal of Medical Ethics 6 (3):117-119.
    This paper was first presented at the London Medical Group's Annual Conference entitled Death: the last taboo held in February 1980. Dr Vere comments on the evidence of research done by him and his colleagues on the pain and discomfort suffered by patients who are dying and are in hospital. He contrasts this with the situation in hospices, analyses the differences, and attributes much of the unnecessary pain suffered in hospitals to attitudes of staff, as well as to a (...)
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  23.  40
    Hospitalized adolescents’ perception of dignity: A qualitative study.Neda Jamalimoghadam, Shahrzad Yektatalab, Marzieh Momennasab, Abbas Ebadi & Najaf Zare - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (3):728-737.
    Background: Adolescents can be vulnerable to diminished dignity in the hospital because young people have significantly different healthcare needs than children and adults. They like to cooperate with caregivers only when they get respectful and dignified care. Care without considering dignity can adversely influence the adolescents’ recovery. However, many studies have been conducted on exploring the concept of the patients’ dignity from the adult patients and fewer studies still have explored the dignity of young people. Objective: This study explores the (...)
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  24. Hospital doctors? views of factors influencing their prescribing.Christina Ljungberg, Åsa Kettis Lindblad & Mary Patricia Tully - 2007 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 13 (5):765-771.
    RATIONALE, AIM AND OBJECTIVE: Factors influencing doctors in prescribing of drugs have mostly been studied in primary care. Studies performed in hospital care have primarily focused on new drugs, not prescribing in general. An in-depth understanding of the prescribing process in the more specialized secondary care is not only important for secondary care itself, but because it also influences prescribing in primary care. The aim of this study is therefore to identify factors that secondary care doctors believe influence them in (...)
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  25.  30
    Reducing Hospital Readmissions: Addressing the Impact of Food Security and Nutrition.Mathew Swinburne, Katie Garfield & Aliza R. Wasserman - 2017 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (s1):86-89.
    Food insecurity in the United States is a profound public health challenge that hospitals are uniquely situated to address. Through the enactment of the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program, the Affordable Care Act provides a strong economic incentive for hospitals to actively confront food insecurity within the communities they serve. While there is a spectrum of nutrition interventions that hospitals can look to when engaging in these efforts, healthy food prescriptions and medically tailored meals are two particularly innovative (...)
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  26.  51
    Hospital utilization and costs for spinal cord stimulation compared with enhanced external counterpulsation for refractory angina pectoris.Susanne M. Bondesson, Ulf Jakobsson, Lars Edvinsson & Ingalill Rahm Hallberg - 2013 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 19 (1):139-147.
  27.  26
    Catholic Hospitals, Institutional Review Boards and Cooperation.Stephen Napier - 2011 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 11 (2):257-266.
    This paper addresses a certain lacuna in moral theological reflec­tion. An institutional review board (IRB) reviews research on human subjects and so represents the institution’s ethical review mechanism for research. The author argues that if an IRB approves a research project that is immoral, it thereby implicates the institution in formal cooperation. The author also argues that numerous ethical concerns are created by current research enterprises—concerns that extend beyond the “usual suspects” of embryonic stem cell research and research using cell (...)
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  28.  54
    Hospital Ethics.Dennis F. Thompson - 1992 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (3):203.
    Hospital ethics, familiar enough in practice but surprisingly neglected in the literature, deals with the ethical problems that arise distinctively or typically in hospitals. More precisely, it consists of the ethical principles that shouldgovern 1) the conduct of healthcare professionals and other staff in their capacities as members of the hospital as an institution, and 2) the conduct of the hospital itself as an institution. It is a species of institutional ethics, which focuses on the ethical problems created or (...)
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  29. Hospitality in and beyond Religions and Politics.Michael Barnes Norton - 2015 - Derrida Today 8 (2):215-237.
    This paper examines Derrida's treatment of the quasi-transcendental structure of hospitality, particularly as it pertains to religious traditions, conceptions of human rights, and modern secularism. It begins by looking to the account Derrida presents in 'Hostipitality', focusing especially on his treatment of the work of Louis Massignon. It then proceeds to an exploration of Kant’s concept of cosmopolitanism and some of its contemporary descendants before returning to Derrida’s treatment of hospitality by way of his critique of this Kantian heritage. The (...)
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  30. Educational Hospitality and Trust in Teacher–Student Relationships: A Derridarian Visiting.Ruyu Hung - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (1):87-99.
    This paper explores the meaning of teacher–student relationships in the light of Derrida’s notions of hospitality and trust. Drawing on Derrida, the author delineates two aspects of educational hospitality: hospitality without determinacy and hospitality as self-surrender. It is argued that educational hospitality is underpinned by trust. A sound teacher–student relationship, the paper concludes, consists in educational hospitality and embedded trust.
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  31.  75
    French hospital nurses' opinion about euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide: a national phone survey.M. K. Bendiane, A.-D. Bouhnik, A. Galinier, R. Favre, Y. Obadia & P. Peretti-Watel - 2009 - Journal of Medical Ethics 35 (4):238-244.
    Background: Hospital nurses are frequently the first care givers to receive a patient’s request for euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide (PAS). In France, there is no consensus over which medical practices should be considered euthanasia, and this lack of consensus blurred the debate about euthanasia and PAS legalisation. This study aimed to investigate French hospital nurses’ opinions towards both legalisations, including personal conceptions of euthanasia and working conditions and organisation. Methods: A phone survey conducted among a random national sample of 1502 (...)
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  32.  64
    Catholic Hospitals and Catholic Identity.O. Kevin O'rourke - 2001 - Christian Bioethics 7 (1):15-28.
    Catholic hospitals seek to offer health care in accord with the example of Christ. They have several models to assist in this effort. The first model is the values portrayed in the Gospels. The Catholic Church has sought to embody these Gospel values in specific teachings. These teachings have been further specified for hospitals in the United States by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in the Ethical and Religious Directives. Finally, the Gospels values are also expressed for (...)
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  33.  35
    Complex Hospital Discharges: Justice Considered. [REVIEW]Maura C. Schlairet - 2014 - HEC Forum 26 (1):69-78.
    How do we respond to the patient who no longer needs inpatient care but refuses to leave the hospital? Complex hospital discharges commonly involve consideration of legal, financial, clinical, and practical issues. Yet, the ethical and contextual issues embedded in complex inpatient discharges are of concern and have not received adequate attention by medical ethicists. The aim of this work is to encourage clinicians and administrators to incorporate a justice rubric when approaching inpatient discharge dilemmas. This paper presents justice as (...)
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  34.  26
    Hospitals as total institutions.Danisha Jenkins, Candace Burton & Dave Holmes - 2022 - Nursing Philosophy 23 (2):e12379.
    The image of the hospital is presented to the public as a place of healing. Though the oft‐criticized total institutions of the past have been notably dismantled, the totalizing practices therein are now operationalized in the health care system. Through the lens of Erving Goffman, this article offers ways in which health care institutions operationalize totalizing practices, contributing to the mortification of patients and nurses alike in service to the bureaucratic machine. This article examines the ways in which totalizing practices (...)
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  35. Hospital Contract Management: Financial Characteristics of For-Profit and Not-for-Profit Operations.Jeffrey Alexander & Bonnie Lewis - 1985 - Inquiry (Misc) 21:230-242.
     
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  36. Hospitality at the intersection of place, time, and self.Lana Parker - 2020 - In Ellyn Lyle, Identity landscapes: contemplating place and the construction of self. Boston: Brill | Sense.
     
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  37.  51
    Hospitalized Children's vIews of the Good Nurse.Mary Brady - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (5):543-560.
    Research relating to patients’ views of the good nurse has mainly focused on the perspectives of adult patients, with little exploring the perceptions of children. This article presents findings from a qualitative study that explored views of the good nurse from the perspective of hospitalized children. The aims of the study were threefold: to remedy a gap in the literature; to identify characteristics of the good nurse from the perspective of children in hospital; and to inform children’s nursing practice. Twenty-two (...)
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  38.  43
    Measuring Hospital Ethics Committee Success.Linda S. Scheirton - 1993 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (4):495.
    As hospital ethics committees become more common in American hospitals, their degree of success should be measured. Just as new technological procedures are evaluated, institutional innovations should also be evaluated. Currently, little is known about the success of HECs, and some authors have wondered whether these committees serve any useful purpose at all. This article reviews the descriptive results of a 1990 study on HEC success as they pertain to the question of how to measure committee success.
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  39.  64
    Hospital ethics committees in Israel: structure, function and heterogeneity in the setting of statutory ethics committees.N. S. Wenger - 2002 - Journal of Medical Ethics 28 (3):177-182.
    Objectives: Hospital ethics committees increasingly affect medical care worldwide, yet there has been little evaluation of these bodies. Israel has the distinction of having ethics committees legally required by a Patients' Rights Act. We studied the development of ethics committees in this legal environment.Design: Cross-sectional national survey of general hospitals to identify all ethics committees and interview of ethics committee chairpersons.Setting: Israel five years after the passage of the Patients' Rights Act.Main measurements: Patients' rights and informal ethics committee structure (...)
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  40.  68
    Unconditional hospitality: Hiv, ethics and the refugee 'problem'.Heather Worth - 2006 - Bioethics 20 (5):223–232.
    ABSTRACT Refugees, as forced migrants, have suffered displacement under conditions not of their own choosing. In 2000 there were thought to be 22 million refugees of whom 6 million were HIV positive. While the New Zealand government has accepted a number of HIV positive refugees from sub‐Saharan Africa, this hospitality is under threat due to negative public and political opinion. Epidemic conditions raise the social stakes attached to sexual exchanges, contagion becomes a major figure in social relationships and social production, (...)
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  41.  28
    Hospitality of the Matrix: Philosophy, Biomedicine, and Culture.Irina Aristarkhova - 2012 - Columbia University Press.
    The question "Where do we come from?" has fascinated philosophers, scientists, and artists for generations. This book reorients the question of the matrix as a place where everything comes from (_chora_, womb, incubator) by recasting it in terms of acts of "matrixial/maternal hospitality" producing space and matter of and for the other. Irina Aristarkhova theorizes such hospitality with the potential to go beyond tolerance in understanding self/other relations. Building on and critically evaluating a wide range of historical and contemporary scholarship, (...)
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  42.  59
    Hospitableness.Elizabeth Telfer - 1995 - Philosophical Papers 24 (3):183-196.
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  43.  43
    Hospital chaplains as ethical consultants in making difficult medical decisions.Waldemar Głusiec - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (4):256-260.
    Background and aimsFew Polish hospitals have Hospital Ethics Committee (HECs) and the services are not always adequate. In this situation, the role of HECs, in providing, among others, ethical advice on the discontinuation of persistent therapies, may be taken over by other entities. The aim of our research was to investigate, how often and on what issues hospital chaplains are asked for ethical advice in reaching difficult medical decisions.MethodsA survey of 100 Roman Catholic chaplains was conducted, that is, at (...)
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  44.  48
    Community hospital oversight of clinical investigators' financial relationships.M. A. Hall, K. P. Weinfurt, J. S. Lawlor, J. Y. Friedman, K. A. Schulman & J. Sugarman - 2008 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 31 (1):7-13.
    The considerable attention to financial interests in clinical research has focused mostly on academic medical centers, even though the majority of clinical research is conducted in community practice settings. To fill this gap, this article maps the practices and policies in 73 community hospitals and several hundred specialized facilities around the country for reviewing clinical investigators’ financial relationships with research sponsors. Community hospitals face a substantially different mix of issues than academic medical centers do because their physician researchers (...)
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  45.  83
    Hospitality ethics: Responses from human resource directors and students to seven ethical scenarios. [REVIEW]Betsy Stevens - 2001 - Journal of Business Ethics 30 (3):233 - 242.
    This study examines the responses of human resource directors and hospitality students to seven different ethical scenarios. Both groups were asked to rate these situations on their ethicality using a Likert-type scale. The directors and students decided that an act of theft was the most unethical, followed by sexual harassment, and an attempt to obtain proprietary information from another company. Expressing racial preferences in terms of servers was fourth. Directors rated all the scenarios ethically lower than did students, indicating that (...)
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  46.  28
    Tertiary hospital nurses’ ethical sensitivity and its influencing factors: A cross-sectional study.Xue Lei Chen, Fei Fei Huang, Jie Zhang, Juan Li, Bi Yun Ye, Yun Xiang Chen, Yuan Hui Zhang, Fang Li, Chun Fang Yu & Jing Ping Zhang - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (1):104-113.
    Background: High ethical sensitivity positively affects the quality of nursing care; nevertheless, Chinese nurses’ ethical sensitivity and the factors influencing it have not been described. Research objectives: The purpose of this study was to describe ethical sensitivity and to explore factors influencing it among Chinese-registered nurses, to help nursing administrators improve nurses’ ethical sensitivity, build harmony between nurses and patients, and promote the patients’ health. Research design: This was a descriptive, cross-sectional study. Participants and research context: We recruited 500 nurses (...)
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  47.  72
    Hospitality, or Kant’s Critique of Cosmopolitanism and Human Rights.Christopher Meckstroth - 2018 - Political Theory 46 (4):537-559.
    Kant’s theory of international politics and his right of hospitality are commonly associated with expansive projects of securing human rights or cosmopolitan governance beyond state borders. This article shows how this view misunderstands Kant’s criticism of the law of nations ( ius gentium) tradition as handed down into the eighteenth century as well as the logic of his radical alternative, which was designed to explain the conditions of possibility of global peace as a solution to the Hobbesian problem of a (...)
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  48.  19
    Can Hospital Have Moral Objections?Scott T. Helsper, Jeremiah J. McCarthy, Gilbert Meilaender, Marshall B. Kapp & George J. Annas - 1987 - Hastings Center Report 17 (5):43.
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  49.  35
    Hundun’s Hospitality: Daoist, Derridean and Levinasian readings of Zhuangzi’s parable.Meiyao Wu - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (13):1435-1449.
    At the end Zhuangzi 7, Hundun (the Middle Sea) invites his two neighbours, the North Sea and South Sea, to visit him. They repay his kindness by drilling seven holes (for seeing, hearing, breathing and eating) in his face to make him more ‘human’ but Hundun dies. This essay pursues Daoist, Derridean and Levinasian readings of the parable which foreground issues of non-duality and the absolute priority yet impossibility of unconditional hospitality or infinite openness to others (or to the Other). (...)
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  50.  48
    About Hospitality And Tolerance In South-Eastern Europe.Petru Bejan - 2010 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 9 (26):36-46.
    We almost can’t find among the countries of the East one not to praise or to display as own virtues – particular or specific – hospitality and tolerance. In fact, to project such qualities in a privileged register of categories is a part of a quasi-generalized imagologic strategy meant to valorize the positive character of some traits – ethnic, national or belonging to a group. Each country needs a favorable mythology, luxuriant in fairytales, heroes, acts of bravery, one in which (...)
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