Background: Cardiologists are involved in the management of patients with multiple cardiovascular risk factors and chronic heart diseases, so empathy is a necessary feature to deal with them. The aim of the study was to evaluate the validity and reliability of the Spanish version of the Jefferson Scale of Physician Empathy (JSPE) among Argentine cardiologists and to explore the potential differences by age, gender, and subspecialty.
Methods: Between August and September 2012, we performed a survey in a non-randomized sample of 566 Spanish-speaking cardiologists of Argentina.
The purpose of this study was to analyze the attitude of a group of cardiologists on the ethical conducts they would accept or adopt when encountered with different hypothetical situations of medical practice. Between August and September of 2011, 700 Argentine cardiologists were surveyed in situations which posed ethical dilemmas in the patient-physician relationship, among colleagues or involving financial agreements with employers or the pharmaceutical industry. Ethical conflicts were evidenced in a series of inappropriate conducts such as differential fees, trips and meals sponsored by laboratories, splitting fees, overbilling, self-referral, charging for patient referral, financial compensation for ordering medical procedures, and various situations derived from the relationship with employers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study considered whether the time employers allotted to medical consultations in many working environments in Argentina might be inadequate to carry out an interview. The objective was to conduct a survey to gather information on the length of cardiologic medical consultations in Argentina.
Methods: During 2007, a survey was carried out that included 816 cardiologists.
Pharmacol Res Commun
June 1983
The effects of amphetamine, scopolamine, phenoxybenzamine, haloperidol and clozapine on biting compulsion induced by large doses of clonidine were studied in mice. Clonidine-induced biting compulsion was potentiated by amphetamine and scopolamine, and inhibited by phenoxybenzamine, haloperidol and clozapine. It appears that biting compulsion elicited by clonidine is mediated by the stimulation of both noradrenaline and dopamine in the brain.
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