Knoop, Tobias Freymüller, Nadja Dettmers, Stephan Meyer-Feil, Thorsten
Published in
Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences
Social work in the German rehabilitation sector is practiced with great variation and its interventions lack research evidence. The SWIMMER project aims to develop a program theory of social work in rehabilitation to explain this variation and to discuss possible conditions. The dealing with ethical dilemmas by social workers is one possible influe...
Sternszus, Robert Steinert, Yvonne Razack, Saleem Boudreau, J. Donald Snell, Linda Cruess, Richard L.
Published in
Frontiers in Medicine
Over the last decade, there has been a drive to emphasize professional identity formation in medical education. This shift has had important and positive implications for the education of physicians. However, the increasing recognition of longstanding structural inequalities within society and the profession has highlighted how conceptualizations o...
Abebe Boe, Eyerusalem Mekonnen, Shiwangizaw Fako, Thomas Aschale Wale, Mastewal Tade, Meku Tsega Chekol, Aklile
Published in
Frontiers in Medicine
Background The foundation of the global healthcare system is nurses, and professionalism in nursing is a basic idea that helps patients, organizations, and people. Studies that have been published in Ethiopia, though, are limited, out-of-date, and poorly documented, especially when it comes to the study setting. Because of this, this study aimed to...
Di Patrizio, Dr. Gabriele
The objective of this article is to show how the presence of the professional in the activity he is carrying out is linked to his own anthropological constitution. This pragmatic anthropological research deals with what man makes with himself. It is compared with knowledge from the sociology of work, the activity clinic and ergology to highlight th...
Ryan, Aine Moran, Catherine N. Byrne, David Hickey, Anne Boland, Fiona Harkin, Denis W. Guraya, Shaista S. Bensaaud, Abdelsalam Doyle, Frank
Published in
Frontiers in Medicine
Introduction Professional identity formation (PIF) is an ongoing, self-reflective process involving habits of thinking, feeling and acting like a physician and is an integral component of medical education. While qualitative work has suggested that PIF is informed by professionalism, resilience, and leadership, there is a dearth of quantitative wor...
Turunen, Jaakko
Published in
Journal of Organizational Sociology
Dynamics connected to professionalization are often analysed from an individual perspective highlighting individual professionals’ struggle for recognition as a professional. This paper looks at the organizational context and its effects on teachers’ professional status in the wake of NPM inspired reforms in Finland. Despite the quantitative nature...
Afful, David Blay Mudzanani, Joyce Funzani
Published in
Journal of Agribusiness and Rural Development
IntroductionPoor-quality extension service delivery motivated the introduction of the Extension Recovery Plan (ERP) in South Africa. The paper assesses the influence of the ERP on field-level, public extension practitioners' technical farm management knowledge and delivery of farm management information to small-holder farmers in the Thulamela muni...
Chervenak, Frank A McLeod-Sordjan, Renee Pollet, Susan L De Four Jones, Monique Gordon, Mollie R Combs, Adriann Bornstein, Eran Lewis, Dawnette Katz, Adi Warman, Ashley
...
Published in
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology
The term "obstetric violence" has been used in the legislative language of several countries to protect mothers from abuse during pregnancy. Subsequently, it has been expanded to include a spectrum of obstetric procedures, such as induction of labor, episiotomy, and cesarean delivery, and has surfaced in the peer-reviewed literature. The term "obst...
Françoise, Christine Perez-Roux, Thérèse
L’article s’intéresse aux tensions éprouvées par les formateurs et formatrices d’enseignant.e.s œuvrant au sein des Instituts nationaux supérieurs du professorat et de l’éducation, suite à la mise en œuvre de la réforme de la formation initiale (rentrée 2021). Ainsi, le positionnement des concours en fin de master a abouti à une nouvelle organisati...
Langston, Christopher
Published in
The Journal of medicine and philosophy
This paper proposes that billing gamesmanship occurs when physicians free-ride on the billing practices of other physicians. Gamesmanship is non-universalizable and does not exercise a competitive advantage; consequently, it distorts prices and allocates resources inefficiently. This explains why gamesmanship is wrong. This explanation differs from...