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Ethical issues in qualitative research
Ethical issues in qualitative research

... • Consent is a choice to act or deliberately not prevent allow or facilitate the act of another – it is not intending actions of the other • Also consent needs to be freely made – no duress and with capacity -autonomous person • There is an open question as to how much someone needs to know about wh ...
Institutional Integrity and Organizational Ethics
Institutional Integrity and Organizational Ethics

... live a moral life and make good ethical decisions? n What are my duties and obligations to other individuals whose life and well-being may be affected by my actions? n What do I owe the common good or the public interest, in my life as a member of society? n ...
The Importance of Ethics to the Practice of Public Relations
The Importance of Ethics to the Practice of Public Relations

... what others in their profession do. 2. Upholding the code will help ensure a working environment in which it will be easier than it would otherwise be to resist pressure to do what the professional would rather not do. 3. Upholding the code helps make the profession one in which practitioners need n ...
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer

... Each person has a fundamental right to be respected and treated as a free and equal rational person capable of making his or her own decisions. The principle is: An action or policy is morally right only if those persons affected by the decision are not used merely as instruments for advancing some ...
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer
On the Importance of Teaching Professional Ethics to Computer

... Each person has a fundamental right to be respected and treated as a free and equal rational person capable of making his or her own decisions. The principle is: An action or policy is morally right only if those persons affected by the decision are not used merely as instruments for advancing some ...
Unit 6-Ethics Desision Making
Unit 6-Ethics Desision Making

... • Ethics is not following the law. A good system of law does incorporate many ethical standards, but law can deviate from what is ethical. • Law can become ethically corrupt, as some totalitarian regimes have made it. Law can be a function of power alone and designed to serve the interests of narrow ...
ETHICS IN NEGOTIATION
ETHICS IN NEGOTIATION

... WHAT ARE ETHICS AND WHY DO THEY APPLY TO NEGOTIATION? Make the decision on the basis of  expected results, or what would give us the ...
Ethics “Moral Philosophy”
Ethics “Moral Philosophy”

... expose their bodies (even when swimming)” ...
Ethics in Engineering
Ethics in Engineering

... Be open to changing the hypothesis when such action is indicated by the experimental evidence Ensure that an objective frame of mind is maintained throughout the research process Conclusions should be confirmed by as many colleagues as possible, and should not be prematurely announced to the public ...
What is ethics?
What is ethics?

... • A five-step process can also help managers think through ethical issues: 1. How would a decision affect stakeholders (the individuals or groups who have an interest, stake, or claim in the actions and overall performance of a company) – Internal stakeholders are people who work for or who own the ...
Personal and Organizational Ethics
Personal and Organizational Ethics

... • To understand the different levels at which business ethics may be addressed • To appreciate principles of personal ethical decision-making • To identify factors affecting an organization’s moral climate • Describe actions or strategies to improve ethical climate ...
Character or Virtue Ethics
Character or Virtue Ethics

... The Bible contains multiple forms of ethical resources ranging from narrative, to proverb, to command. . . . The nurturing of virtue by means of story in the context of community (the church) is an indispensable part of ethics, but the community also nurtures the moral life through commands, princip ...
Business Environment
Business Environment

... Be a team player (group think) Rationalizing that others do it Resisting competitive threats Advancing own career ...
02 key concepts
02 key concepts

... the epistemological view that a system of ethics can rest on some solid, universal foundation that is inherent in the nature of reality, and that through some method we can know, with confidence, what that foundational system of ethics is we can make universally valid truth claims about ethics, if w ...
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 4

... place a strong emphasis on ethical behavior code of ethics - a formal statement of the ethical priorities a business adheres to leaders in the business should give life and meaning to the code of ethics by repeatedly emphasizing their importance, and then acting on them the business should put in ...
Chapter 4 - Jeremy Alan Woods
Chapter 4 - Jeremy Alan Woods

... does my decision fall within the accepted values of standards that typically apply in the organizational environment? am I willing to see the decision communicated to all stakeholders affected by it? would the people with whom I have significant personal relationships approve of the decision? ...
ch01_wcr - University of Delaware
ch01_wcr - University of Delaware

... 1) Meta-ethics: Study of the origin and meaning of ethical principles 2) Normative ethics: Development of moral standards (ethical norms) to regulate behavior 3) Applied ethics: The application of ethical norms (morals) to specific situations, such as abortion, euthanasia, etc. ...
Ethics
Ethics

...  enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable, but unethical  gives an employee the strength to say no to a superior who instructs her to pursue actions that are unethical  gives employees the integrity to go public to the media and blow the whistle on persistent unethical beh ...
Chapter 4
Chapter 4

...  enables managers to walk away from a decision that is profitable, but unethical  gives an employee the strength to say no to a superior who instructs her to pursue actions that are unethical  gives employees the integrity to go public to the media and blow the whistle on persistent unethical beh ...
Business Ethics Fundamentals
Business Ethics Fundamentals

... Normative relativism has some rather undesirable implications: – it prohibits us from ever morally condemning another culture’s values and practices; – it suggests that we need look no further that our own culture for moral guidance; – it renders the notions of moral progress and moral reform ...
ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR EMERGENCY SERVICES MANAGERS
ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR EMERGENCY SERVICES MANAGERS

... The current popular theory is that a Code of Ethics should be developed by a committee within the Agency/Department, even if that committee simply ratifies the Code of Ethics in place for the State, City, County, or Town ...
Target audience •	 business practitioners, particularly to directors,
Target audience • business practitioners, particularly to directors,

... bringing together the fields of philosophical ethics, moral theology, business studies, marketing and public policy. It will encompass the social, political, legal, economic and moral aspects of how businesses are governed, in order to provide those wishing to engage with the issues of business and ...
Materialy/07/History of Ethics
Materialy/07/History of Ethics

... "Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law." "Act as though the maxim of your action were by your will to become a universal law of nature." Act so that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in that of another, always as ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... global communities. Information about individuals can be used as ‘a form of control, power, and manipulation’ The negative side: the misuse of information and computing. ...
Document
Document

... Ethics, and Bioethics ...
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Primary care ethics

Primary care ethics is the study of the everyday decisions that primary care clinicians make, such as: how long to spend with a particular patient, how to reconcile their own values and those of their patients, when and where to refer or investigate, how to respect confidentiality when dealing with patients, relatives and third parties. All these decisions involve values as well as facts and are therefore ethical issues. These issues may also involve other workers in primary healthcare, such as receptionists and managers.Primary care ethics is not a discipline; it is a notional field of study which is simultaneously an aspect of primary health care and applied ethics. De Zulueta argues that primary care ethics has ‘a definitive place on the ‘bioethics map’, represented by a substantial body of empirical research, literary texts and critical discourse (2, 9, 10). The substantial body of research referred to by De Zulueta (9) has a tendency to be issue-specific, such as to do with rationing(11), confidentiality, medical reports or relationships with relatives.Much of the literature on primary care ethics concerns primary care physicians. The term primary care physician is synonymous with family practitioner, or general practitioner; meaning a medically qualified clinician who is the first point of access to health care, with general responsibilities which may but do not necessarily include child health or obstetrics and gynaecology. Other primary care clinicians; nurses, physiotherapists, midwives, and in some situations pharmacists may face similar issues, and some (confidentially, prioritisation of patients) may also involve administrative staff. In some healthcare systems primary care specialists may also encounter many of these issues.
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