keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38493524/don-t-be-a-rat-an-investigation-of-the-taboo-against-reporting-other-students-for-cheating
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tal Waltzer, Riley L Cox, Carina F Moser, Gail D Heyman
This research examines barriers to reporting academic dishonesty in early adulthood (Study 1; N = 92) and adolescence (Study 2; N = 137). Participants were asked to describe a recent time they observed a peer cheating and to reflect on their decision about whether to report the cheating. They also responded to hypothetical scenarios about observing typical cheating actions, and the presence of social motives (e.g., whether people who report tend to gain reputations for being snitches) was manipulated in each scenario...
March 16, 2024: Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38483482/-he-did-girls-things-hong-kong-and-canadian-children-s-reasoning-about-moral-judgments-of-peers-gendered-behaviors
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen Man Wa Kwan, Sylvia Yun Shi, Laura N MacMullin, A Natisha Nabbijohn, Diana E Peragine, Doug P VanderLaan, Wang Ivy Wong
Children show less positivity toward gender-nonconforming (GN) than gender-conforming (GC) peers. Yet, little is known about children's reasoning about peers of varying gender expressions, including age-, gender-, and culture-related influences. We investigated how children aged 4- to 5- and 8- to 9-years-old in Hong Kong and Canada ( N = 678) reason about their moral judgments of GC and GN peers. After viewing vignettes describing GC and GN boys and girls, we asked children whether each target peer's behavior was right or wrong and why they thought so...
March 14, 2024: Developmental Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38482688/uncertain-facts-or-uncertain-values-testing-the-distinction-between-empirical-and-normative-uncertainty-in-moral-judgments
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maximilian Theisen, Markus Germar
People can be uncertain in their moral judgments. Philosophers have argued that such uncertainty can either refer to the underlying empirical facts (empirical uncertainty) or to the normative evaluation of these facts itself (normative uncertainty). Psychological investigations of this distinction, however, are rare. In this paper, we combined factor-analytical and experimental approaches to show that empirical and normative uncertainty describe two related but different psychological states. In Study 1, we asked N = 265 participants to describe a case of moral uncertainty and to rate different aspects of their uncertainty about this case...
March 2024: Cognitive Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38479938/what-is-happening-with-the-clinical-nutritionist-realities-and-challenges
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mirta Crovetto, Samuel Durán-Aguero, Solange Parra-Soto, Tannia Valeria Carpio-Arias, Edna J Nava-González, Saby Mauricio-Alza, Leslie Landaeta-Díaz, Melissa Miranda-Durán, Jhon Jairo Bejarano-Roncancio, Sonia Ivankovich Guillén, María Vitullo, Otilia Perichart-Perera, Shelia Cerezo de Ríos, Karla Cordón-Arrivillaga, Beatriz Núñez-Martínez, Gloria Maricela Morales-Morales, Eliana Romina Meza Miranda
BACKGROUND: At hospital level, clinical nutritionists play a fundamental role in health recovery, contributing to shorter hospital stays and addressing hospital malnutrition. However, in Latin America no studies have been conducted on the activities of the nutritionist and the factors influencing their performance. AIMS: to describe the activities of the clinical nutritionist in public and private hospital settings in Latin America and to determine the factors associated with disciplinary practice...
April 2024: Clinical Nutrition ESPEN
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38477220/exploring-adolescents-experiences-of-continuing-to-wear-face-masks-during-covid-19-a-qualitative-descriptive-study-in-barcelona%C3%A2-spain
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mariela Aguayo-González, Juan M Leyva-Moral, David Giménez-Diez, Andreu Colom-Cadena, Isabel Martínez, Carolina Watson, Anna Bordas, Cinta Folch, Jordi Casabona
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic prompted the use of face masks as a social distancing measure. Although evidence supports their effectiveness in preventing infection, it remains unclear why some adolescents choose to continue wearing them postpandemic, even when it is no longer mandatory. This study aims to explore adolescents' experiences of wearing face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic when their use was no longer mandatory. METHOD: In this exploratory qualitative study, data were collected from 16 adolescents through face-to-face semistructured interviews...
April 2024: Health Expectations: An International Journal of Public Participation in Health Care and Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38471236/development-and-classification-of-autonomous-vehicle-s-ambiguous-driving-scenario
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tiju Baby, Hatice Şahin Ippoliti, Philipp Wintersberger, Yiqi Zhang, Sol Hee Yoon, Jieun Lee, Seul Chan Lee
Human drivers are gradually being replaced by highly automated driving systems, and this trend is expected to persist. The response of autonomous vehicles to Ambiguous Driving Scenarios (ADS) is crucial for legal and safety reasons. Our research focuses on establishing a robust framework for developing ADS in autonomous vehicles and classifying them based on AV user perceptions. To achieve this, we conducted extensive literature reviews, in-depth interviews with industry experts, a comprehensive questionnaire survey, and factor analysis...
March 11, 2024: Accident; Analysis and Prevention
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38469878/the-reasonable-content-of-conscience-in-public-bioethics
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abram Brummett, Jason Eberl
Bioethicists aim to provide moral guidance in policy, research, and clinical contexts using methods of moral analysis (e.g., principlism, casuistry, and narrative ethics) that aim to satisfy the constraints of public reason. Among other objections, some critics have argued that public reason lacks the moral content needed to resolve bioethical controversies because discursive reason simply cannot justify any substantive moral claims in a pluralistic society. In this paper, the authors defend public reason from this criticism by showing that it contains sufficient content to address one of the perennial controversies in bioethics-the permissibility and limits of clinician conscientious objection...
March 12, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38469271/disclosing-or-concealing-multiple-sclerosis-in-the-workplace-two-sides-of-the-same-coin-insights-from-a-swedish-population-based-survey
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Dervish, Victoria Mailen Arfuch, Chantelle Murley, Kyla A McKay, Alejandra Machado, Agneta Wennman-Larsen, Emilie Friberg
BACKGROUND: People with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) face health and social challenges of living with a chronic and potentially disabling condition. To disclose or conceal MS at work may critically affect individuals' work situation, career opportunities, and health. PwMS may experience a dilemma when assessing if the possible benefits of disclosing the diagnosis outweigh the possible risks. However, concealing in the long-term may have health implications and prevent opportunities for support and work adjustments...
2024: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38465673/public-reason-bioethics-and-public-policy-a-seductive-delusion-or-ambitious-aspiration
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonard M Fleck
Can Rawlsian public reason sufficiently justify public policies that regulate or restrain controversial medical and technological interventions in bioethics (and the broader social world), such as abortion, physician aid-in-dying, CRISPER-cas9 gene editing of embryos, surrogate mothers, pre-implantation genetic diagnosis of eight-cell embryos, and so on? The first part of this essay briefly explicates the central concepts that define Rawlsian political liberalism. The latter half of this essay then demonstrates how a commitment to Rawlsian public reason can ameliorate (not completely resolve) many of the policy disagreements related to bioethically controversial medical interventions today...
March 11, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38463212/how-reasons-make-law
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angelo Ryu
According to legal anti-positivism, legal duties are just a subset of our moral duties. Not every moral duty, though, is legal. So what else is needed? This article develops a theory of how moral duties come to be law, which I call the constitutive reasons account. Among our moral reasons are legal reasons-and those reasons make moral duties into legal duties. So the law consists of moral duties which have, as one of their underlying reasons, a legal reason. Such legal reasons arise from a relationship with the body for which it is the law of...
2024: Oxford Journal of Legal Studies
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38459395/infertility-and-risk-of-postmenopausal-breast-cancer-in-the-women-s-health-initiative
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leslie V Farland, Kimberly E Lind, Cynthia A Thomson, Nazmus Saquib, Aladdin H Shadyab, Peter F Schnatz, Rogelio Robles-Morales, Lihong Qi, Howard Strickler, Dorothy S Lane, Gayathree Murugappan, Denise J Roe, Holly R Harris
PURPOSE: Although infertility (i.e., failure to conceive after ≥ 12 months of trying) is strongly correlated with established breast cancer risk factors (e.g., nulliparity, number of pregnancies, and age at first pregnancy), its association with breast cancer incidence is not fully understood. Previous studies were primarily small clinic-based or registry studies with short follow-up and predominantly focused on premenopausal breast cancer. The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between infertility and postmenopausal breast cancer risk among participants in the Women's Health Initiative (analytic sample = 131,784; > 25 years of follow-up)...
March 9, 2024: Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38451700/using-balanced-pragmatism-in-political-discussions-increases-cross-partisan-respect
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Curtis Puryear, Kurt Gray
Synthesizing research on wisdom and a real-world practitioner intervention, we develop and test a strategy for presenting political views that fosters cross-partisan respect. This strategy of balanced pragmatism combines two aspects of "wise reasoning": balancing multiple interests and seeking pragmatic solutions. Studies 1-5 ( N = 2,846) demonstrate that participants respected outgroup political elites more when they used balanced pragmatism versus other forms of messaging. Studies 6-8 ( N = 671) extend the usefulness of balanced pragmatism to everyday political disagreements: cross-partisan comments about divisive issues (i...
March 7, 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38450933/taking-the-risk-a-systematic-review-of-ethical-reasons-and-moral-arguments-in-the-clinical-use-of-polygenic-risk-scores
#33
REVIEW
Lara Andreoli, Hilde Peeters, Kristel Van Steen, Kris Dierickx
Debates about the prospective clinical use of polygenic risk scores (PRS) have grown considerably in the last years. The potential benefits of PRS to improve patient care at individual and population levels have been extensively underlined. Nonetheless, the use of PRS in clinical contexts presents a number of unresolved ethical challenges and consequent normative gaps that hinder their optimal implementation. Here, we conducted a systematic review of reasons of the normative literature discussing ethical issues and moral arguments related to the use of PRS for the prevention and treatment of common complex diseases...
March 7, 2024: American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38450583/why-moral-psychology-needs-personality-psychology
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessie Sun, Luke D Smillie
People vary in how they perceive, think about, and respond to moral issues. Clearly, we cannot fully understand the psychology of morality without accounting for individual differences in moral functioning. But decades of neglect of and explicit skepticism toward such individual differences has resulted in a lack of integration between moral psychology and personality psychology-the study of psychological differences between people. In recent years, these barriers to progress have started to break down. This special issue aims to celebrate and further increase the visibility of the personality psychology of morality...
March 7, 2024: Journal of Personality
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38448909/an-empirical-ethics-study-of-the-coherence-of-nice-technology-appraisal-policy-and-its-implications-for-moral-justification
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria Charlton, Michael DiStefano
BACKGROUND: As the UK's main healthcare priority-setter, the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has good reason to want to demonstrate that its decisions are morally justified. In doing so, it has tended to rely on the moral plausibility of its principle of cost-effectiveness and the assertion that it has adopted a fair procedure. But neither approach provides wholly satisfactory grounds for morally defending NICE's decisions. In this study we adopt a complementary approach, based on the proposition that a priority-setter's claim to moral justification can be assessed, in part, based on the coherence of its approach and that the reliability of any such claim is undermined by the presence of dissonance within its moral system...
March 6, 2024: BMC Medical Ethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38433773/the-evolving-complexities-of-maid-care-in-canada-from-a-nursing-perspective
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Barbara Pesut, Sally Thorne, Kenneth Chambaere, Margaret Hall, Catharine J Schiller
Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) legislation has evolved rapidly in Canada with significant impacts on nursing practice. The purpose of this paper is to describe evolving complexities in legislative context and practice standards that influence the experiences nurse practitioners and registered nurses have with MAID. Qualitative interviews were conducted with 25 registered nurses and 10 nurse practitioners from diverse contexts across Canada. Participants described their practices and considerations when discussing MAID as part of advance care planning; their use of, and challenges with, waivers of consent; their practice considerations in negotiating the complexities of clients for whom death is not reasonably foreseeable; and their moral wrestling with the inclusion of MAID for persons whose sole underlying medical condition is mental illness...
2024: Global Qualitative Nursing Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38426387/health-providers-reasons-for-participating-in-abortion-care-a-scoping-review
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bronwen Merner, Casey M Haining, Lindy Willmott, Julian Savulescu, Louise A Keogh
BACKGROUND: There is a global shortage of health providers in abortion care. Public discourse presents abortion providers as dangerous and greedy and links 'conscience' with refusal to participate. This may discourage provision. A scoping review of empirical evidence is needed to inform public perceptions of the reasons that health providers participate in abortion. OBJECTIVE: The study aimed to identify what is known about health providers' reasons for participating in abortion provision...
2024: Women's Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38415761/-is-individualized-education-for-a-medical-students-desirable-%C3%A2-a-common-policy-on-how-to-handle-medical-students-requests-for-individual-adaptations-is-needed
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenny Lindberg, Sam Polesie, Marit Karlsson, Erik Malmqvist, Goran Mijaljica
In Sweden, freedom of conscience for health care professionals is not legally permitted. However, requests from medical students to adjust and/or skip compulsory learning activities because of their religious and moral convictions appear to get more abundant. This creates problems when learning activities are directly related to the examination objectives stated by the Higher Education Ordinance of Sweden. Allowing students to abstain from certain parts of the medical program raises difficulties as to what kind of convictions that should be accepted and to what degree...
February 28, 2024: Läkartidningen
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38390024/-a-case-for-the-inclusion-of-oculocutaneous-albinism-as-a-skin-related-neglected-tropical-disease
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Aquaron, Patricia Lund, Charlotte Baker
Oculocutaneous albinism (OCA) is genetically transmitted. In this paper we advocate for this disease to be included in the NTD list of the WHO. OCA type 2 is the most common form of albinism in sub-Saharan Africa, with a prevalence of 1 in 7900 among the Bamileke of Cameroon, 1 in 3900 in South Africa and 1 in 1100 among the Ibos of Nigeria, as compared to a prevalence of 1 in 10,000 among African Americans and 1 in 36,000 among White Americans and Europeans. The medical problems related to ophthalmological aspects (poor visual acuity, ametropia, nystagmus, photophobia) and dermatological aspects of albinism (sensitivity to UV rays from the sun and development of skin cancers) are well known...
December 31, 2023: Med Trop Sante Int
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38376767/no-true-right-to-die-barriers-in-access-to-physician-assisted-death-in-case-of-psychiatric-disease-advanced-dementia-or-multiple-geriatric-syndromes-in-the-netherlands
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caroline van den Ende, Eva Constance Alida Asscher
Even in the Netherlands, where the practice of physician-assisted death (PAD) has been legalized for over 20 years, there is no such thing as a 'right to die'. Especially patients with extraordinary requests, such as a wish for PAD based on psychiatric suffering, advanced dementia, or (a limited number of) multiple geriatric syndromes, encounter barriers in access to PAD. In this paper, we discuss whether these barriers can be justified in the context of the Dutch situation where PAD is legally permitted for those who suffer unbearably and hopelessly as a result of medical conditions...
February 20, 2024: Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy
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