Responses
Other content recommended for you
- To lie or not to lie: resident physician attitudes about the use of deception in clinical practice
- Medical informed choice: understanding the element of time to meet the standard of care for valid informed consent
- Should non-disclosures be considered as morally equivalent to lies within the doctor – patient relationship
- Relatives ' attitudes towards informing patients about the diagnosis of Alzheimer ’s disease
- How should the ‘ privilege ’ in therapeutic privilege be conceived when considering the decision - making process for patients with borderline capacity
- Hope and therapeutic privilege: time for shared prognosis communication
- Would you like to know what is wrong with you? On telling the truth to patients with dementia
- Juggling law, ethics, and intuition: practical answers to awkward questions
- Deception as treatment: the case of depression
- Revealing the diagnosis of androgen insensitivity syndrome in adulthood