18 research outputs found
The Role of Organizational Climate Conditions in Enhancing the Desirability of Salesperson Rewards
Need for Cognition, Information and Moral Decision Making in Marketing Exchange: A Partial Model
Perceived Corporate Ethicalness and Salesforce Turnover: a New Rationale for More Ethical Corporate Behavior
Information sur la diversite des emplois et des activites en Lorraine
SIGLEAvailable from INIST (FR), Document Supply Service, under shelf-number : RP 15877 (1); RP 15877 (2) / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueFRFranc
Competing and conflicting interests in the care of critically ill patients
Medical professionals are expected to prioritize patient interests, and most patients trust physicians to act in their best interest. However, a single patient is never a physician's sole concern. The competing interests of other patients, clinicians, family members, hospital administrators, regulators, insurers, and trainees are omnipresent. While prioritizing patient interests is always a struggle, it is especially challenging and important in the ICU setting where most patients lack the ability to advocate for themselves or seek alternative sources of care. This review explores factors that increase the risk, or the perception, that an ICU physician will reason, recommend, or act in a way that is not in their patient's best interest and discusses steps that could help minimize the impact of these factors on patient care