A sco** review of moral stressors, moral distress and moral injury in healthcare workers during COVID-19

PL Riedel, A Kreh, V Kulcar, A Lieber… - International Journal of …, 2022 - mdpi.com
Ethical dilemmas for healthcare workers (HCWs) during pandemics highlight the centrality of
moral stressors and moral distress (MD) as well as potentially morally injurious events …

How to reduce stigma and bias in clinical communication: a narrative review

M Healy, A Richard, K Kidia - Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2022 - Springer
A growing body of literature demonstrates that healthcare providers use stigmatizing
language when speaking and writing about patients. In April 2021, the 21st Century Cures …

[HTML][HTML] Ethical considerations of using ChatGPT in health care

C Wang, S Liu, H Yang, J Guo, Y Wu, J Liu - Journal of Medical Internet …, 2023 - jmir.org
ChatGPT has promising applications in health care, but potential ethical issues need to be
addressed proactively to prevent harm. ChatGPT presents potential ethical challenges from …

Working in value‐discrepant environments inhibits clinicians' ability to provide compassion and reduces well‐being: A cross‐sectional study

A Pavlova, SJ Paine, S Sinclair… - Journal of Internal …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
Background The practice of compassion in healthcare leads to better patient and clinician
outcomes. However, compassion in healthcare is increasingly lacking, and the rates of …

'Climate change mitigation is a hot topic, but not when it comes to hospitals': a qualitative study on hospital stakeholders' perception and sense of responsibility for …

C Quitmann, R Sauerborn, I Danquah… - Journal of Medical …, 2023 - jme.bmj.com
Objective Physical and mental well-being are threatened by climate change. Since hospitals
in high-income countries contribute significantly to climate change through their greenhouse …

Microethics: the ethics of everyday clinical practice

RD Truog, SD Brown, D Browning… - Hastings Center …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Over the past several decades, medical ethics has gained a solid foothold in medical
education and is now a required course in most medical schools. Although the field of …

Healthcare at the crossroads: the need to shape an organizational culture of humanistic teaching and practice

EA Rider, MAC Gilligan, LG Osterberg… - Journal of general …, 2018 - Springer
Background Changes in the organization of medical practice have impeded humanistic
practice and resulted in widespread physician burnout and dissatisfaction. Objective To …

Unprofessional behaviours experienced by hospital staff: qualitative analysis of narrative comments in a longitudinal survey across seven hospitals in Australia

A Pavithra, N Sunderland, J Callen… - BMC Health Services …, 2022 - Springer
Background Unprofessional behaviours of healthcare staff have negative impacts on
organisational outcomes, patient safety and staff well-being. The objective of this study was …

What does person‐centred care mean, if you weren't considered a person anyway: An engagement with person‐centred care and Black, queer, feminist, and …

JB Smith, EM Willis, J Hopkins‐Walsh - Nursing Philosophy, 2022 - Wiley Online Library
Despite the prominence of person‐centred care (PCC) in nursing, there is no general
agreement on the assumptions and the meaning of PCC. We sympathize with the work of …

Professional identity formation in medical education: some virtue-based insights

DT Kim, MK Applewhite, W Shelton - Teaching and Learning in …, 2024 - Taylor & Francis
Abstract Issue: In 2010, the Carnegie Foundation published a call to reorient medical
education in terms of the formation of identities rather than mere competencies, and the …