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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.ccm.0000257367.13185.6c | DOI Listing |
From the 12th Century, when the word referred to taking religious vows, to its present meaning as a constellation of organized practices requiring special training, legal liability, and covenants with individual patients and society, professionalism has played an important role in the practice of medicine. Until relatively recently, the concepts of professionalism and professional behavior were rooted in timeless ideals that individual physicians were expected to achieve in training and practice. As an ideal type, professionalism was seen as a quality or characteristic residing in the individual physician.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProf Case Manag
November 2024
Jennifer Anderson DNP, RN, CNL-BC, is an Assistant Professor in the Adult Health Department at the University of South Alabama College of Nursing in Mobile, Alabama. She has 25 years' experience as a registered nurse and holds a doctor of nursing practice (DNP) degree. Dr. Anderson is certified as a clinical nurse leader (CNL).
Res Involv Engagem
October 2024
Department of Vision Sciences, School of Health and Life Sciences, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK.
Background: We conducted an NIHR-funded evidence synthesis project, reviewing evidence relating to interventions for perceptual disorders following stroke. This related paper describes how people with lived experience of stroke-related perceptual disorders contributed to and influenced the project, and identifies lessons for future review projects.
Methods: We planned our patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) activities within a study protocol, described according to the domains of the ACTIVE framework; these were founded on principles for good practice in PPIE.
Bioethics
October 2024
Kahn Sagol Maccabi (KSM) Research & Innovation Center, Maccabi Healthcare Services, Tel Aviv, Israel.
The integration of genetic information (GI) into the electronic health record (EHR) seems inevitable as the mainstreaming of genomics continues. Such newly provided accessibility to GI could be beneficial for improving health care, as well as for supporting clinical decision-making and health management. Notwithstanding these promising benefits, the automatic integration of GI into the EHR, allowing unrestricted access to one's GI through patient portals, carries various knowledge-related risks for patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVaccines (Basel)
March 2024
Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli", Via Luciano Armanni 5, 80138 Naples, Italy.
Background: This cross-sectional survey investigated the knowledge, attitudes, and coverage of recommended vaccinations among a random sample of patients with chronic medical conditions, at higher risk of vaccine-preventable diseases (VPDs), in Italy.
Methods: The survey was conducted via telephone-based interviews.
Results: Multinomial regression analysis showed that the patients who believed that VPDs were severe were more likely to know one recommended vaccination; those who believed that VPDs were severe and those who were advised from a general practitioner (GP) were more likely to know two vaccinations; those who were older, graduated, with more time from diagnosis, who believed that VPDs were severe, who did not need additional information, and who were advised from a GP were more likely to know three or four vaccinations.
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