Recent disclosures of failures of care in the National Health Service (NHS) in England have led to debates about compassion deficits disallowing health professionals to provide high quality responsive care. While the link between high quality care and compassion is often taken for granted, it is less obvious how compassion – often originating in the individual’s emotional response – can become a moral sentiment and lead to developing a system of norms and values underpinning ethics of care. In this editorial, I argue why and how compassion might become a foundation of ethics guiding health professionals and a basis for ethics of care in health service organisations. I conclude by discussing a recent case of prominent healthcare failure in t...
The absence of compassion, argues the author, is not the cause of healthcare failures but rather a s...
In February 2013, the Francis Report outlined what it described as ‘systematic failings’ at Mid Staf...
In response to the International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM)editorial, this comm...
Abstract Recent disclosures of failures of care in the National Health Service (NHS) in England have...
ecent disclosures of failures of care in the National Health Service (NHS) in England ...
This is a short commentary to the editorial issued by Marianna Fotaki, entitled: “Why and how is com...
This is a short commentary to the editorial issued by Marianna Fotaki, entitled: “Why ...
Compassion is a complex process that is innate, determined in part by individual traits, and modulat...
Although Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial is helpful and challenging by looking at both the professional ...
Although Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial is helpful and challenging by looking at both the professional ...
This paper represents a commentary to Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial: ‘ Why and how is co...
Compassion is a complex process that is innate, determined in part by individual traits, and modulat...
How to instill compassion in a healthcare organization? In this article, I respond to Marianna Fotak...
This paper represents a commentary to Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial: ‘Why and how is compassion necess...
How to instill compassion in a healthcare organization? In this article, I respond to Marianna Fotak...
The absence of compassion, argues the author, is not the cause of healthcare failures but rather a s...
In February 2013, the Francis Report outlined what it described as ‘systematic failings’ at Mid Staf...
In response to the International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM)editorial, this comm...
Abstract Recent disclosures of failures of care in the National Health Service (NHS) in England have...
ecent disclosures of failures of care in the National Health Service (NHS) in England ...
This is a short commentary to the editorial issued by Marianna Fotaki, entitled: “Why and how is com...
This is a short commentary to the editorial issued by Marianna Fotaki, entitled: “Why ...
Compassion is a complex process that is innate, determined in part by individual traits, and modulat...
Although Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial is helpful and challenging by looking at both the professional ...
Although Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial is helpful and challenging by looking at both the professional ...
This paper represents a commentary to Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial: ‘ Why and how is co...
Compassion is a complex process that is innate, determined in part by individual traits, and modulat...
How to instill compassion in a healthcare organization? In this article, I respond to Marianna Fotak...
This paper represents a commentary to Marianna Fotaki’s Editorial: ‘Why and how is compassion necess...
How to instill compassion in a healthcare organization? In this article, I respond to Marianna Fotak...
The absence of compassion, argues the author, is not the cause of healthcare failures but rather a s...
In February 2013, the Francis Report outlined what it described as ‘systematic failings’ at Mid Staf...
In response to the International Journal of Health Policy and Management (IJHPM)editorial, this comm...