This research adopts Critical Discourse Analysis as a perspective to explore how kindness was expressed and promoted in university communities and city communities from January to March in 2020 when the Covid pandemic broke out in the UK and provide a window on British culture in which kindness was expressed and promoted through discourse. It combines a qualitative method with a corpus-based quantitative method. It is found that kindness was meant for providing support and showing compassion and inclusion to community members and that strategies in lexis, syntax and metaphor can reproduce or resist the expression and promotion of kindness in communities. During the pandemic, the intentional kindness expressed by community authorities was respect of diversity rather than inclusion of different values or ethnicity and no substantial support was provided to vulnerable members even though authorities were trying to impress the public by claiming that they were making constant efforts to support the community. Case studies revealed that we should caution against the use of passivation and the pronouns like .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09579265221148691 | 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 PDFBMJ Lead
December 2024
Department of Primary Health Care and General Practice, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Objective: This scoping review seeks to understand how kindness, compassion and empathy are defined and conceptualised within existing healthcare services literature.
Introduction: Little consensus exists on how healthcare literature defines and conceptualises kindness. Kindness is often conflated with the terms compassion and empathy, which both have more prominence in the literature.
Soc Work Health Care
December 2024
Department of Sociology and Social Work, Universidad de Valladolid - Campus Miguel Delibes, Valladolid, Spain.
This study explores the perceived effects of a home-based end-of-life social care program in palliative care in Spain, from the perspective of caregivers. A qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 75 caregivers from the INTecum project. Non-probability purposive sampling was used to recruit the study participants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEthn Health
January 2025
Department of Emergency Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada.
Australas Psychiatry
December 2024
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Medicine and Psychology, Canberra Hospital, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
There are many identified challenges for mental healthcare services in Australia and New Zealand including design, infrastructure and workforce shortfalls. In the 2024 RANZCP Workforce Report over 75% of trainees and psychiatrists endorsed symptoms of burnout, and over 80% reported that workforce shortages contributed. There is a need for effective leadership to reform and renew healthcare services.
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