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Healthcare ethics cannot be limited in scope to apply only to the patient but needs to apply to the healthcare practitioner as well. The relationship between the patient and the healthcare practitioner has shifted from a power relationship to a complementary relationship. Leadership, mentorship and coaching play important roles in facilitating this shift. Several themes informed this book on healthcare ethics: Vulnerability in healthcare ethics, Decisions between right and wrong, Quality of healthcare, Life-ending decisions, Community-based research, Ethical decision-making, Spritiuality in healthcare
Medical ethics & professional conduct --- healthcare ethics --- introduction --- vulnerability --- right and wrong --- quality --- approach --- influence --- culture --- values --- faith --- end-of-life --- decisions --- human rights --- euthanasia --- community --- participatory --- research --- ethical issues --- impact --- healthcare practitioners --- decision-making --- processes --- spirituality.
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Modelling as Research Methodology is written for the scientist and student researching the (expected) functioning of systems under specified conditions. As such, it represents an introduction to the use of modelling in natural, human and economical sciences. The book is divided into two sections. The first section illustrates the universal nature of modelling as aid to the researcher. In the second section, several typical examples of modelling are described.
Research methods: general --- modelling --- mathematical modelling --- physical modelling --- science and knowledge --- types of models --- human and economic sciences --- humanities --- business and human sciences --- modelling of terrains and structures --- mechatronic design process --- data acquisition
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The authors have developed the ethical imagination inviting a sense of “otherness” towards the vulnerable self, rebounding care for the other as a way to understand our everyday neurotic (normal) tendency of small vices as the propensity and possibility for responsibility towards the other. The authors, inviting the reader into troublesome feelings such as laziness and anger, bring a Levinasian horizon into focus, so that even in the midst of laziness, there remains the small goodness to set the self free to care for the other, meeting the demands, challenges, hesitation, shuddering, tension and shocks of such alterity, of living “otherwise”.
Medical ethics & professional conduct --- caregiver --- philosophy --- science --- caretakers --- philosophers --- morality --- vulnerable --- neurotic --- small vices --- responsibility --- laziness --- anger --- Levinasian --- goodness --- demands --- challenges --- hesitation --- shuddering --- tension --- shock --- vulnerability of the caregiver --- vices for the virtuous caring of the caregiver --- group discussions amongst caregivers --- social sciences --- healthcare
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