2013
DOI: 10.1136/medethics-2011-100302
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The ethics of imperfect cures: models of service delivery and patient vulnerability: Table 1

Abstract: A rising number of patients require continuing or palliative services and this means that they will need to transition from one model of healthcare delivery to another. If it is generally recognised that patient vulnerability to inadequate services increases when the setting in which patient receives care changes, it is usually taken to be the result of poor coordination of services or personnel. Recognising that an integrated system is essential to adequate access, the point that I put forward in this paper i… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Acknowledging patient vulnerability creates the ethical imperative to care. It is arguably vulnerability rather than patient autonomy that shapes the moral core of clinical practice [26][27][28][29]. In the clinical setting, vulnerability and interdependence defines the patient experience creating a moral imperative for trustworthy others to care.…”
Section: A Different View: Vulnerability Interdependence and Narratimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Acknowledging patient vulnerability creates the ethical imperative to care. It is arguably vulnerability rather than patient autonomy that shapes the moral core of clinical practice [26][27][28][29]. In the clinical setting, vulnerability and interdependence defines the patient experience creating a moral imperative for trustworthy others to care.…”
Section: A Different View: Vulnerability Interdependence and Narratimentioning
confidence: 99%