1,721,009 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-rea-10.1177_17470161241250274 – Supplemental material for Exploring views of South African research ethics committees on pandemic preparedness and response during COVID-19

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-rea-10.1177_17470161241250274 for Exploring views of South African research ethics committees on pandemic preparedness and response during COVID-19 by Theresa Burgess, Stuart Rennie and Keymanthri Moodley in Research Ethics</p

    Ethical Competencies in Medicine

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    PublishedMit Beiträgen von: Eva-Maria Ableidinger, Fatemeh Bahmani, Juan Pablo Beca I., Judith Bock, Claudia Eckstein, Tobias Eichinger, Andreas Frewer, Dileep G, Laura Geissner, Anna Hirsch, Hanna Hubenko, Elisabeth Krauel, Mario Kropf, Katja Kühlmeyer, Yonghui Ma, Rohit Malpani, Christof Mandry, Roli Mathur, Julia Mikolaj, Keymanthri Moodley, Jing-Bao Nie, Alireza Parsapour, María Bernardita Portales V., Oliver Rauprich, Andreas Reis, Annette Riedel, Antonia Sahm, Jan Schildmann, Martina Schmidhuber, Ehsan Shamsi-Gooshki and Nina Webe

    Standards of Care

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    Ethical Competencies in Medicine

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    PublishedMit Beiträgen von: Eva-Maria Ableidinger, Fatemeh Bahmani, Juan Pablo Beca I., Judith Bock, Claudia Eckstein, Tobias Eichinger, Andreas Frewer, Dileep G, Laura Geissner, Anna Hirsch, Hanna Hubenko, Elisabeth Krauel, Mario Kropf, Katja Kühlmeyer, Yonghui Ma, Rohit Malpani, Christof Mandry, Roli Mathur, Julia Mikolaj, Keymanthri Moodley, Jing-Bao Nie, Alireza Parsapour, María Bernardita Portales V., Oliver Rauprich, Andreas Reis, Annette Riedel, Antonia Sahm, Jan Schildmann, Martina Schmidhuber, Ehsan Shamsi-Gooshki and Nina Webe

    Bioethics: Clinical

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    Bioethics: Clinical

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    Standards of Care

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    Pandemics Remind Us of Our Responsibility to Ourselves, Others and Future Generations: A Time for Intergenerational Justice?

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    Over the past year, the world has experienced colliding pandemics of viral outbreaks and injustice - social and health inequities, gender-based violence, marginalisation of immigrant populations, racial discrimination. All of this was superimposed on an ever - worsening climate crisis. This is not the first viral pandemic neither will it be the last. The collective moral injury experienced by the global community requires recalibrating for life in an interpandemic world, moving beyond self-interest and building trust as an ethical imperative. Central to this recalibration is assumption of responsibility to future generations - intergenerational justice. Not only does such an ethics of responsibility enhance mutuality and reciprocity, it is also synchronous with African philosophical thinking, which supports interdependence in this world and is firmly rooted in ancestral worlds and future worlds
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