Article info
Ethics
Myth of reincarnation: a challenge for mental health profession
- Dr A A Muhammad Gadit, Discipline of Psychiatry, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 300-Prince Philip Drive, St John’s, NL A1B 3V6, Canada; amin.muhammad{at}med.mun.ca
Citation
Myth of reincarnation: a challenge for mental health profession
Publication history
- Received December 10, 2007
- Revised April 4, 2008
- Accepted July 7, 2008
- First published January 30, 2009.
Online issue publication
April 27, 2016
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
2009 BMJ Publishing Group & Institute of Medical Ethics
Other content recommended for you
- Hindu birth customs
- Sikh religion and palliative care
- Language, games and the role of interpreters in psychiatric diagnosis: a Wittgensteinian thought experiment
- Workload and the mysterious law of karma
- Caring burden and coping with haemodialysis: a qualitative study with family caregivers in Sri Lanka
- What would encourage help-seeking for memory problems among UK-based South Asians? A qualitative study
- Which medicine? Whose standard? Critical reflections on medical integration in China
- Ethical and cultural implications for conducting verbal autopsies in South and Southeast Asia: a qualitative study
- Contention and collaboration: the tenuous encounter of modern Ayurveda and Western medicine in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries
- Joseph Beuys: trauma and catharsis