Clinical ethics issues in HIV care in Canada: an institutional ethnographic study

scientific article

Clinical ethics issues in HIV care in Canada: an institutional ethnographic study is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1186/S12910-017-0171-3
P932PMC publication ID5294723
P698PubMed publication ID28166775

P50authorZack MarshallQ56925248
P2093author name stringChris Kaposy
Nicole R Greenspan
Cynthia Kitson
Shelley Marshall
Jill Allison
P2860cites workPrevention of HIV-1 infection with early antiretroviral therapyQ24634688
Syndemics, sex and the city: understanding sexually transmitted diseases in social and cultural contextQ28246782
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A scoping study to identify opportunities to advance the ethical implementation and scale-up of HIV treatment as prevention: priorities for empirical researchQ33861390
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The fragile web of responsibility: AIDS and the duty to treat.Q34410207
Risk factors for elevated HIV incidence among Aboriginal injection drug users in VancouverQ34431903
High coverage of ART associated with decline in risk of HIV acquisition in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South AfricaQ34629087
Challenging the paradigm: anthropological perspectives on HIV as a chronic disease.Q35327005
When to initiate antiretroviral therapy in HIV-1-infected adults: a review for clinicians and patientsQ36174872
Syndemic vulnerability, sexual and injection risk behaviors, and HIV continuum of care outcomes in HIV-positive injection drug usersQ36257356
Physician contributions to disparities in HIV/AIDS care: the role of provider perceptions regarding adherenceQ36338893
Moral distress among Ugandan nurses providing HIV care: a critical ethnographyQ38432930
The ethical case for providing cost-free access to lifesaving HIV medications in Canada: Implications of a qualitative studyQ38981647
Beyond decision making: class, community organizations, and the healthwork of people living with HIV/AIDS. Contributions from institutional ethnographic researchQ39845651
The work of negotiating HIV as a chronic condition: a qualitative analysisQ40653516
"Why are you pregnant? What were you thinking?": How women navigate experiences of HIV-related stigma in medical settings during pregnancy and birthQ40865306
Vets, denialists and rememberers: social typologies of patient adherence and non-adherence to HAART from the perspective of HIV care providersQ41505582
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HIV-protease inhibitorsQ41751665
Non/infectious corporealities: tensions in the biomedical era of 'HIV normalisation'.Q42280603
Framing responsibility: HIV, biomedical prevention, and the performativity of the law.Q42285262
The great hijackQ43189893
Legal risks and responsibilities of physicians in the AIDS epidemicQ45106750
Women's experience of HIV as a chronic illness in South Africa: hard-earned lives, biographical disruption and moral careerQ46761861
The 'actualities' of knowledge work: an institutional ethnography of multi-disciplinary primary health care teamsQ47600613
Time, self and the medication day: a closer look at the everyday work of 'adherence'.Q47622906
A disease unlike any other? Why HIV remains exceptional in the age of treatmentQ47660001
Sexuality, vulnerability to HIV, and mental health: an ethnographic study of psychiatric institutionsQ47761872
'Dying from' to 'living with': framing institutions and the coping processes of African American women living with HIV/AIDS.Q47937950
Bridging the gap between antiretroviral access and adherence in Mexico.Q51754293
Medication practice and feminist thought: a theoretical and ethical response to adherence in HIV/AIDS.Q53275051
Clinical care and research in AIDS.Q54585377
Do physicians have an obligation to treat patients with AIDS?Q56921228
The problem of "significant risk": exploring the public health impact of criminalizing HIV non-disclosureQ57151935
“My job is to deal with what I can”: HIV care providers’ perspectives on adherence to HAART, addictions, and comprehensive care delivery in Vancouver, British ColumbiaQ57259543
AIDS research: the ethics of clinical trialsQ58665994
AIDS screening, confidentiality, and the duty to warnQ68932773
AIDS and a duty to protectQ69320857
HIV-positive patients and the doctor-patient relationship: perspectives from the marginsQ81861828
Doctors have a duty to breach patient confidentiality to protect others at risk of HIV infectionQ86300488
P433issue1
P921main subjectCanadaQ16
ethnographyQ132151
research ethicsQ1132684
medical ethicsQ237151
P304page(s)9
P577publication date2017-02-06
P1433published inBMC Medical EthicsQ15762173
P1476titleClinical ethics issues in HIV care in Canada: an institutional ethnographic study
P478volume18

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cites work (P2860)
Q51365544A qualitative description of service providers' experiences of ethical issues in HIV care.
Q55425143The organizational attributes of HIV care delivery models in Canada: A cross-sectional study.

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