2 results match your criteria: "Asian University for Women Chittagong Bangladesh.[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Effective communication among physicians is crucial for delivering quality healthcare, and understanding medical students' attitudes towards learning these skills can enhance medical education in culturally relevant ways.* -
  • A study was conducted to culturally adapt and validate the Communication Skills Attitude Scale (CSAS) into Bangla for medical students in Bangladesh, involving a survey of 566 undergraduate students to assess their perceptions of communication skills.* -
  • The results indicate that the Bangla version of the CSAS is valid and reliable, with a high internal consistency score (Cronbach's alpha = 0.882), revealing that female students are generally more open to learning communication skills than male students.*
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This article examines compulsory vaccination from the perspective of Nozick's theory of rights. It argues that the unvaccinated are a threat, even if unintended, to the rights of others. The reasons Nozick provides for when such threats may be forcibly prevented, such as the identifiability of the rights violator, general fear of the risky activity, probability of harm, and the general benefits of the activity, are examined, and it is argued that those reasons weigh in favour of prohibition of the threat and hence in favour of compulsory vaccination.

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