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Donnelly, Lauren J.; Cervantes, Paige E.; Guo, Fei; Stein, Cheryl R.; Okparaeke, Eugene; Kuriakose, Sarah; Filton, Beryl; Havens, Jennifer; Horwitz, Sarah M. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2023
Caring for individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can be complicated, especially when challenging behaviors are present. Providers may feel unprepared to work with these individuals because specialized training for medical and social service providers is limited. To increase access to specialized training, we modified an effective…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Caregiver Attitudes, Attitude Change, Caregiver Training
Daniels, Benjamin; Boffa, Jody; Kwan, Ada; Moyo, Sizulu – Research Ethics, 2023
Simulated standardized patients (SPs) are trained individuals who pose incognito as people seeking treatment in a health care setting. With the method's increasing use and popularity, we propose some standards to adapt the method to contextual considerations of feasibility, and we discuss current issues with the SP method and the experience of…
Descriptors: Deception, Informed Consent, Simulation, Patients
Lindsay C. Nickels; Trisha L. Marshall; Ezra Edgerton; Patrick W. Brady; Philip A. Hagedorn; James J. Lee – Applied Linguistics, 2024
Diagnostic uncertainty is prevalent throughout medicine and significantly impacts patient care, especially when it goes unrecognized. However, we lack a reliable clinical means of identifying uncertainty. This study evaluates the narrative discourse within clinical notes in the Electronic Health Record as a means of identifying diagnostic…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Ambiguity (Context), Context Effect, Medicine
Burgess, Simon; Rogers, Marg; Jefferies, Diana – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2022
In caring professions, such as childcare and healthcare, empathy and narrative underpin important aspects of the emotional work of early childhood educators and nurses (Rogers, Jefferies & Ng, 2022). Unfortunately, they are not given much attention in scholarly articles, but it is important for practitioners to understand them (Barton &…
Descriptors: Empathy, Child Care, Health Services, Young Children
Helgesson, Gert – Research Ethics, 2019
It has been debated for quite some time among bioethicists and others whether or not the distinction between therapy and research in healthcare can and should be maintained. This paper tries to clarify what the disagreement is about, and argues that the distinction can be maintained in most, if not all, situations. However, even if it can be…
Descriptors: Research, Therapy, Ethics, Safety
Roncolato, Carolyn – Journal of College and Character, 2022
Religion and spirituality played a founding role in American healthcare. Though it shows up differently today, religious diversity continues to be present in powerful ways in American medicine. However, despite its relevance, most health field professionals are not adequately prepared to engage the religious diversity they encounter. This article…
Descriptors: Religion, Religious Factors, Health Services, Allied Health Personnel
Bonnette Villalba Webb; Jamie Anne Marcus – Distance Learning, 2023
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is a data-driven mathematical process that incorporates machine-based logic, usually in the form of algorithms. The algorithm is the building block of AI (Robert, 2019). Education, training, and competencies are now conducted through virtual reality, robotics, simulation, and technology learning-based platforms by…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Leadership, Electronic Learning, Artificial Intelligence
Job, Claire; Yan Wong, Ken; Anstey, Sally – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2019
Patient and public involvement in the provision of healthcare professional education is considered best practice by both the Healthcare Professions Council and the Nursing Midwifery Council. One key activity in healthcare education is the classroom-based 'patient story'. This consists of a person re-telling and reflecting on their experiences of…
Descriptors: Patients, Health Services, Reflection, Theory Practice Relationship
Ochs, Vanessa L. – Journal of Jewish Education, 2019
When Jewish Sensibilities were formulated (2003) as a framework, it was not for the purpose of teaching Jews how or why to be Jewish. Rather, Jewish Sensibilities were a way for Jews to reflect on the Jewish content already in their lives; they also allowed practitioners in the field of health care to think about the Jewish patients and families…
Descriptors: Jews, Judaism, Guidelines, Teaching Methods
Brüggemann, A. Jelmer; Forsberg, Camilla; Colnerud, Gunnel; Wijma, Barbro; Thornberg, Robert – Journal of Moral Education, 2019
Bystander passivity has received increased attention in the prevention of interpersonal harm, but it is poorly understood in many settings. In this article we explore bystander passivity in three settings based on existing literature: patient abuse in health care; bullying among schoolchildren; and oppressive treatment of students by teachers.…
Descriptors: Patients, Health Services, Bullying, Teacher Student Relationship
Polychronis, Paul D. – Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 2020
Inadequate attention has been paid to the implications for clients and professional psychology resulting from use of electronic records in outpatient integrated care settings. Affecting clients, there have been pressures to erode longstanding protections of privacy, confidentiality, informed consent, and client self-determination regarding control…
Descriptors: Psychology, Records (Forms), Privacy, Confidentiality
Larsen, Henry; Friis, Preben; Heape, Chris – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2018
Healthcare practitioners are often presented with vulnerable encounters where their professional experience is insufficient when dealing with patients who suffer from illnesses such as chronic pain. How can one otherwise understand chronic pain and develop practices whereby medical healthcare practitioners can experience alternative ways of doing…
Descriptors: Health Services, Change, Theater Arts, Chronic Illness
Heiney, Sue P.; Darr-Hope, Heidi; Meriwether, Marian P.; Adams, Swann Arp – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2017
The benefits of using art in health care, especially with cancer patients, have been described anecdotally. However, few manuscripts include a conceptual framework to describe the evaluation of patient programs. This paper describes patients' evaluation of a healing arts program developed within a hospital for cancer patients that used art-making,…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Products, Medical Care Evaluation, Patients
Jørgensen, Marianne Winther – Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice, 2015
Nikolas Rose's work on contemporary biopower centres the "biocitizen" as a subject governed through freedom and made individually responsible in matters of health. This article argues that a focus on its conditions of possibility will enable a better contextualisation of the biocitizen as merely one subject position among others. Using a…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Patients, Self Determination, Public Policy
Weaver, Shannon; Gull, Bethany; Ashby, Jeanie; Kamimura, Akiko – Journal of Education and Practice, 2017
The oppression of underserved populations is pervasive throughout the history of the United States (U.S.), especially in health care. Brazilian educator Paulo Freire's controversial ideas about systems of power can be aptly applied to health care. This paper focuses specifically on arguably the most medically underserved group in the U.S.…
Descriptors: Health Education, Acculturation, Health Services, Patients