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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.70047 | DOI Listing |
Intern Med J
April 2025
Public Health (Planetary Health), School of Public Health, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Int J Paediatr Dent
November 2024
School of Dental Sciences, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Background: The evidence underpinning caries management for children has progressed dramatically over the past 20 years. Anecdotally, this is not reflected in the teaching provided to undergraduate dental students, with the ongoing teaching of outdated methods within some dental schools.
Aim: To capture the current undergraduate teaching provision and clinical treatment experience requirement relative to caries management in paediatric dentistry in UK dental schools.
J Wound Care
July 2022
Chief Medical Officer, Wound & Surgical Recovery - MIMEDX Group, Inc., US.
J Health Organ Manag
January 2021
Institute of Nursing Science and Practice, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria.
Purpose: This ethnographic revisit of a general hospital aims to critically explore and describe the mechanisms of corporate culture change and how institutional excellence is facilitated and constrained by everyday management practices between 1996/1997 and 2014/2015.
Design/methodology/approach: A five-month field study of day-to-day life in the hospital's nursing division was conducted by means of an ethnographic revisit, using participant-observation, semi-structured interviews, free conversations and documentary material.
Findings: Using labour process analysis with ethnographic data from a general hospital, the corporate culture is represented as faceted, complex and sophisticated, lending little support to the managerial claims that if corporate objectives are realised, they are achieved through some combination of shared values, beliefs and managerial practices.
J Med Ethics
February 2022
Program in Medical Ethics, Humanities and the Law, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA.
The field of clinical bioethics strongly advocates for the use of advance directives to promote patient autonomy, particularly at the end of life. This paper reports a study of clinical bioethicists' perceptions of the professional consensus about advance directives, as well as their personal advance care planning practices. We find that clinical bioethicists are often sceptical about the value of advance directives, and their personal choices about advance directives often deviate from what clinical ethicists acknowledge to be their profession's recommendations.
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