In this article I discuss the little examined relationship between time and patient autonomy. Using the findings from a study on the experience of premenopausal cancer patients making fertility preservation decisions during their treatment, I focus on how the patients in the study understood time, and how this understanding interacted with and influenced their decision-making. I then analyse in more depth the importance of time in patient decision-making, and the relationship of time to concepts of patient autonomy and decision-making in the field of bioethics more generally. Focusing on the relational conception of autonomy, I conclude that time is an integral part of patient autonomy which warrants further research, such that it can be be...
Many physicians and health care leaders express concern about the amount of time available for clini...
Care—concern for and attending to the needs of the particular other we take responsibility—requires ...
The article reproblematizes time in relation to the concept of the ‘extended present’...
In this article I discuss the little examined relationship between time and patient autonomy. Using ...
Key words: bone marrow transplant; ethical decision making; palliative care; time Departing from a c...
Departing from a contemporary novel about a boy who is going to die from leukaemia, this article sho...
This article explores how temporal structuring of clinical activities affects nurses' establishment ...
Personal autonomy is widely valued. Recognition of its vulnerability in health care contexts led to ...
Time is a key element of social life. Yet it has been relatively neglected in social theory and in t...
In this paper, I analyze how different didactic discourses surrounding pregnancy, birth, and postpar...
Personal autonomy is widely valued. Recognition of its vulnerability in health care contexts led to ...
ABSTRACT. The article reproblematizes time in relation to the concept of the ‘extended present ’ by ...
In this paper we aim to contribute to a more articulate, reflective and systematic understanding of ...
Drawing on Gadamer’s hermeneutic philosophy, this article presents a key outcome of broader research...
Aims of the study/paper. To explore the meaning of nursing time, both as it is represented in the li...
Many physicians and health care leaders express concern about the amount of time available for clini...
Care—concern for and attending to the needs of the particular other we take responsibility—requires ...
The article reproblematizes time in relation to the concept of the ‘extended present’...
In this article I discuss the little examined relationship between time and patient autonomy. Using ...
Key words: bone marrow transplant; ethical decision making; palliative care; time Departing from a c...
Departing from a contemporary novel about a boy who is going to die from leukaemia, this article sho...
This article explores how temporal structuring of clinical activities affects nurses' establishment ...
Personal autonomy is widely valued. Recognition of its vulnerability in health care contexts led to ...
Time is a key element of social life. Yet it has been relatively neglected in social theory and in t...
In this paper, I analyze how different didactic discourses surrounding pregnancy, birth, and postpar...
Personal autonomy is widely valued. Recognition of its vulnerability in health care contexts led to ...
ABSTRACT. The article reproblematizes time in relation to the concept of the ‘extended present ’ by ...
In this paper we aim to contribute to a more articulate, reflective and systematic understanding of ...
Drawing on Gadamer’s hermeneutic philosophy, this article presents a key outcome of broader research...
Aims of the study/paper. To explore the meaning of nursing time, both as it is represented in the li...
Many physicians and health care leaders express concern about the amount of time available for clini...
Care—concern for and attending to the needs of the particular other we take responsibility—requires ...
The article reproblematizes time in relation to the concept of the ‘extended present’...