Physicians are bound by bioethical standards, including nonmaleficence, beneficence and respect for patient autonomy. |
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It affects those who are the beneficiaries of the charity's functions, beneficence and bounty. |
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On the other hand, waking a dying person to inform them of their imminent demise goes against the principle of beneficence. |
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Some features of its make-up were evidences of his goodness and beneficence, while others displayed his displeasure. |
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But it would be a long time before you came up with a source of happiness that derived from the beneficence of government. |
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Surely beneficence and malignance are both at play in the contemporary world, at every level. |
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In 1598 Santa Isabel enjoyed the beneficence of Ana Paredes Aldrete who left the convent a rent worth 1000 maravedis a year. |
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The economic and social power of Church beneficence exposed the poverty of public provision for the poor. |
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Victims live in fear while repeat violators enjoy the benefits of parole under the beneficence of liberal magistrates. |
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In feudal times the serfs had to rely on the beneficence of the lord of the manor. |
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They are carriers of important values that represent a common good, and that must be sustained by charitable beneficence. |
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The principles of non-maleficence and beneficence are closely linked, and have several implications in the area of research. |
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As health-care workers and as responsible members of the community, we believe in beneficence. |
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At the core of these questions is the conflict between two basic ethical principles, beneficence and autonomy. |
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In particular the principles of beneficence, autonomy, transparency, multidisciplinarity and the precautionary principle were examined. |
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But the way to convey China's beneficence, might and centrality in the world order was to bestow gifts more valuable than the tribute rendered. |
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The principle of beneficence directs us to bring about the good of others, whenever possible. |
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This being the case, does the rich man's help to the needy, on which he so readily prides himself as something meritorious, really deserve to be called beneficence at all? |
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We have wept that God may show his beneficence his mercy and that his peace may come upon the people of Pakistan. |
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Incorporate the principles of autonomy, beneficence and non-maleficence into all treatment and care-related decisions and interventions. |
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The only decision maker was the professional, and the only moral principle to be taken into account was beneficence and non-maleficence. |
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Even for those organisations whose impact is measured in sales, not beneficence, some of the recommendations are worth pondering. |
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The principle of beneficence imposes a duty to benefit others and, in research ethics, a duty to maximize net benefits. |
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Traditional medical ethics used to work with the moral principle of beneficence and non-maleficence, understood in a paternalistic way. |
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I lean back on the couch, puff out my chest a bit, and feel the satisfying beneficence of charity offered. |
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Clinicians act paternalistically when they act on the beneficence principle to the exclusion of the autonomy principle. |
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The ethical principles of autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, truth telling and confidentiality are integrated into the provision of care and program development. |
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Ethical and scientific review of proposed research is one important way to ensure that the principles of beneficence and non-maleficence are respected. |
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The African diaspora is, for this reason, more than equipped to enter the dialogue among civilizations, having seeded the germ of a civilization itself, as if with the beneficence of retributive justice. |
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Giles Terera's Caliban, having been dispossessed of his island kingdom, rather tamely submits to Prospero's patronising beneficence at the conclusion. |
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But he won hearts, if not minds, by throwing lavish parties and opening his chequebook to British causes. Great as his beneficence was, it could be self-serving. |
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If someone offers to realise your dream, why turn up your nose at the source? Still, the sudden fashion for beneficence has the smell of a trend about it. |
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Because prayers are requests, it implies that the petitioner believes that the petitionee is capable of granting beneficence. |
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We support answers with moral reasoning and invoke moral principles, many of which you are no doubt familiar with, such as autonomy, beneficence, and justice. |
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Adam Smith wrote that it isn't from the beneficence of the butcher, the baker, or the brewer that we get our dinner, but from their self-interest. |
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The emphasis on beneficence rather than patient autonomy in parental substitute decision-making leads to a prima facie bias toward curative rather than palliative options. |
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The application of the principle of beneficence to science means that scientific studies and their practical implementation should be done for the good of human kind. |
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Good examples of beneficence by science are the improvements in sanitation, water purification and disease prevention that have drastically reduced mortality rates over the centuries in the developed world. |
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The Group decided to include the principle of beneficence in order to reflect in the text the need to optimize the positive benefits of any decision or practice and to reduce the possible harms of such decisions or practices. |
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Beneficence is godlike, and he who does most good to his fellow-man is the Master of Masters, and has learned the Art of Arts. |
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