The Ethical Basis of Medical PracticeP.B. Hoeber, 1950 - 185 sider |
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Side 116
... situation . He was so sure of his visual diagnosis that he made his prognosis accordingly . These two serious omissions were fairly charged against him . It had been wartime , he was probably badly overworked , he had satisfied himself ...
... situation . He was so sure of his visual diagnosis that he made his prognosis accordingly . These two serious omissions were fairly charged against him . It had been wartime , he was probably badly overworked , he had satisfied himself ...
Side 120
... situation , feeling its poignancy , but not caring whether they live or die . Some years ago Dr. Osler gave the " Ingersoll Lecture on the Immortality of Man " at Harvard.3 In the course of the lecture he said that when a person is ...
... situation , feeling its poignancy , but not caring whether they live or die . Some years ago Dr. Osler gave the " Ingersoll Lecture on the Immortality of Man " at Harvard.3 In the course of the lecture he said that when a person is ...
Side 122
... situation was that of the young man who had had , or who still had , a venereal disease . That situation has now been remedied by the medical test required in an increasing number of states prior to issuance of a marriage license . The ...
... situation was that of the young man who had had , or who still had , a venereal disease . That situation has now been remedied by the medical test required in an increasing number of states prior to issuance of a marriage license . The ...
Indhold
Our Overlapping Professions | 19 |
The Specialist and the General Practitioner | 31 |
The Nature of Conscience | 43 |
Copyright | |
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A. C. Bradley accepted Alexis Carrel American American Medical Association asked attitude become better bladder Cabot called cancer CHAPTER Charles Francis Potter church common concerned conscience court cystoscope death diagnosis dilemma discuss disease doctor duty England Euthanasia Society experience fact faith feel fession finally give given Harvard hospital human ideal individual instance interest Josiah Royce judgments Karl Pearson legalize live Lord Jim Massachusetts General Hospital matter means medical ethics medical profession Medical School mental mind minister ministry modern moral nature never oath once organ pain patient perhaps persons physician practice practitioner principle probably problem professional question religion religious reverence RH negative right and wrong Schweitzer scientist seems sick single situation socialized medicine specialist student suffering suggest surgeon tell thing thought tion told totalitarian tragic truth vivisection warrant whole will-to-live words York