Results for ' Hiv Aids'

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  1.  37
    If HIV/AIDS is punishment, who is bad?Loretta M. Kopelman - 2002 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (2):231 – 243.
    HIV/AIDS strikes with the greatest frequency in sub-Saharan Africa, a region lacking resources to deal with this epidemic. To keep millions more people from dying, wealthy countries must provide more help. Yet deeply ingrained biases may distance the sick from those who could provide far more aid. One such prejudice is viewing disease as punishment for sin. This 'punishment theory of disease" ascribes moral blame to those who get sick or those with special relations to them. Religious versions hold (...)
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  2.  37
    The HIV/aIDS pandemic: A sign of instability in a complex global system.Solomon R. Benatar - 2002 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (2):163 – 177.
    Intense scientific work on HIV/AIDS has led to the development of effective combination drug therapies and there is hope that effective vaccines will soon be produced. However, the majority of people with HIV/AIDS in the world are not benefiting from such advances because of extreme poverty. This article focuses on the pandemic as a reflection of a complex trajectory of social and economic forces that create widening global disparities in wealth and health and concomitant ecological niches for the (...)
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  3.  40
    The HIV/AIDS pandemic, African traditional values and the search for a vaccine in Africa.Godfrey B. Tangwa - 2002 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (2):217 – 230.
    The response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Africa has so far ignored important traditional African values and attitudes toward disease and commerce. These values and attitudes are significantly different from the libertarian, market-driven, profit-oriented values and practices of important sectors of the Western world. To deal with this epidemic, the world should consider respect for, and possibly even adoption of those African values, which provide for people in genuine need, irrespective of their ability to pay. HIV/AIDS vaccine research (...)
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  4.  73
    Hiv/aids reduces the relevance of the principle of individual medical confidentiality among the bantu people of southern Africa.Paul Ndebele, Joseph Mfutso-Bengo & Francis Masiye - 2008 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 29 (5):331-340.
    The principle of individual medical confidentiality is one of the moral principles that Africa inherited unquestioningly from the West as part of Western medicine. The HIV/AIDS pandemic in Southern Africa has reduced the relevance of the principle of individual medical confidentiality. Individual medical confidentiality has especially presented challenges for practitioners among the Bantu communities that are well known for their social inter-connectedness and the way they value their extended family relations. Individual confidentiality has raised several unforeseen problems for persons (...)
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  5.  26
    HIV/aids, Religion, and Human Rights: A Comparative Analysis of Bangladesh, Indonesia, and Iran.Mahmood Monshipouri & Travis Trapp - 2012 - Human Rights Review 13 (2):187-204.
    This article’s central aim is to debunk the overly simplified, paradigmatic, and essentialist description of certain types of Muslim sexuality, arguing that such essentialist characterization of Muslims ignores the nonunique social determinants (poverty, education, and sociostructural exclusions) of HIV/aids risk in an increasingly globalized world. To support this argument, we rely on a thematic and comparative analysis. A reoccurring theme in this project is that issues of public health, human rights, justice, and social empowerment are inextricably intertwined. Having established (...)
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  6.  20
    HIV/AIDS clients, privacy and confidentiality; the case of two health centres in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.Jonathan Mensah Dapaah & Kodjo A. Senah - 2016 - BMC Medical Ethics 17 (1):41.
    BackgroundWhile most studies on HIV/AIDS often identify stigmatization and patients’ unwillingness to access health care as critical problems in the control of the pandemic, very few studies have focused on the possible consequences of accessing health care by sero-positives. This paper examines the socio-psychological trauma patients experience in their desire to access health care in two health facilities in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.MethodsThrough participant observation, informal conversation and in-depth interviews, data were collected from health workers and clients of (...)
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  7.  18
    HIV/AIDS and the principle of non-discrimination and non-stigmatization.Volnei Garrafa, Alcinda Maria Machado Godoi & Sheila Pereira Soares - 2012 - Revista Latinoamericana de Bioética 12 (2):118-123.
    The text examines the article 11 of the Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights of UNESCO that deals with the principle of non-discrimination and non-stigmatization. Both concepts are related to the theme of human dignity, while discrimination is an inherent part of stigma: stigma does not exist if there is no discrimination. In this context, this paper aims to study the relationship between stigma, discrimination and HIV / AIDS. The study argues that to loosen the bonds that hold (...)
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  8.  29
    HIV/AIDS e práticas preventivas em uniões heterossexuais estáveis.Lirene Finkler, Manoela Ziebell de Oliveira & William B. Gomes - 2004 - Aletheia: An International Journal of Philosophy 20:09-25.
    O estudo descreve e analisa práticas preventivas adotadas por 15 casais heterossexuais estáveis nos períodos anterior e posterior à testagem para HIV, realizadas voluntariamente em um serviço de saúde pública. Utilizou-se uma entrevista semiestruturada para avaliar se a possibilidade real de infecçã..
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  9.  23
    Fighting HIV/AIDS: The Role of the Pharmaceutical Industry and the Sustainability of its Actions in Sub-Saharan Africa—An Empirical Investigation.David Rygl, Markus G. Kittler & Carina Friedmann - 2007 - International Corporate Responsibility Series 3:189-205.
    Since the first diagnosis of an HIV infection in 1956, the number of victims infected with the virus has dramatically increased to 40.3 million in 2005. The countries of sub-Saharan Africa carry the largest burden of HIV/AIDS worldwide. Various programs against the spread of the epidemic in this region have been promised. The objective of this article is to analyze to what extent these programs can achieve a sustainable effect. This article examines in detail the sustainability of thirteen programmes (...)
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  10.  14
    Fighting HIV/AIDS: The Role of the Pharmaceutical Industry and the Sustainability of its Actions in Sub-Saharan Africa—An Empirical Investigation.David Rygl, Markus G. Kittler & Carina Friedmann - 2007 - International Corporate Responsibility Series 3:189-205.
    Since the first diagnosis of an HIV infection in 1956, the number of victims infected with the virus has dramatically increased to 40.3 million in 2005. The countries of sub-Saharan Africa carry the largest burden of HIV/AIDS worldwide. Various programs against the spread of the epidemic in this region have been promised. The objective of this article is to analyze to what extent these programs can achieve a sustainable effect. This article examines in detail the sustainability of thirteen programmes (...)
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  11.  31
    The HIV/AIDS crisis and corporate moral responsibility in the light of the Levinasian notions of proximity and the third.Conceição Soares - 2007 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 16 (3):278–285.
    This paper focuses on the set of problems regarding the HIV/AIDS crisis in the specific domain of corporate moral responsibility within a context of the Levinasian notion of proximity (infinite responsibility) and the Third. Against a totalitarian, homogeneous society, Levinas opens the way to a social pluralism, which has its sources in the disquiet provoked by the strangeness of the Other's face. Corporate responsibility, understood from this point of view, would not reduce institutional relations to an anonymous world of (...)
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  12.  4
    Locating HIV/aids and India: Cautionary Notes on the Globalization of Categories.Niranjan Karnik - 2001 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 26 (3):322-348.
    HIV/aids can now be considered a pandemic as it affects all parts of the world. As attentive as scholars have been to the biomedical and epidemiological aspects of the disease, they have been slower to try to understand it as a disease of transnational significations or meanings. This article looks to the ways that the conceptual categories of HIV/aids came to India in the biomedical literature, the approaches that the media in the United States and India took in (...)
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  13.  47
    HIV/AIDS in rural India: context and health care needs.Saseendran Pallikadavath, Laila Garda, Hemant Apte, Jane Freedman & R. William Stones - 2005 - Journal of Biosocial Science 37 (5):641.
    Primary research on HIV/AIDS in India has predominantly focused on known risk groups such as sex workers, STI clinic attendees and long-distance truck drivers, and has largely been undertaken in urban areas. There is evidence of HIV spreading to rural areas but very little is known about the context of the infection or about issues relating to health and social impact on people living with HIV/AIDS. In-depth interviews with nineteen men and women infected with HIV who live in (...)
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  14.  44
    Hiv/aids Clinical Research, And The Claims Of Beneficence, Justice, And Integrity.Deborah Zion - 2004 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 13 (4):404-413.
    In a recent edition of the Medical Journal of Australia, Greg Dore and David Cooper called on persons in developed nations like Australia to bridge the divide between resource-rich countries to nations in the developing world, where therapies to ease or halt the ravages of the virus are nonexistent or in short supply.
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  15.  21
    HIV/AIDS and Professional Freedom of Expression in Japan.Masami Matsuda - 2002 - Nursing Ethics 9 (4):432-438.
    A senior physician with a government role in Japan made a widely reported and misleading statement about Thailand’s policy on HIV/AIDS patients. He claimed that in Thailand the policy is to spend public money on the prevention of HIV infection while allowing AIDS patients to die untreated. The author, a community nursing specialist in Japan with first-hand knowledge of HIV/AIDS policy in Thailand, thought that this statement would influence attitudes negatively in Japan. However, speaking out about this (...)
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  16.  22
    Hiv +/Aids Related Bioethical Issues in Japan.Kazumasa Hoshino - 1995 - Bioethics 9 (3):303-308.
    Annual and cumulative incidences of HIV + and AIDS in patients reported by the AIDS Surveillance Committee of the Ministry of Health and Welfare are cited to illustrate some characteristics in Japan: nearly 59% of either HIV + or AIDS patients were infected through injection of blood products or by blood transfusion. A number of plaintiffs have sued the Japanese government and pharmaceutical companies since 1989, but no judicial decisions have yet been made. The incidence of HIV (...)
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  17.  22
    From HIV/AIDS to COVID-19: Feminist Bioethics and Pandemics.Michael Montess - 2022 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (1):175-176.
    The COVID-19 pandemic is not the first pandemic that many of us have faced in our lives. The HIV/AIDS pandemic continues to affect women, racialized people, and LGBTQ2S+ people around the world today, and there are significantly fewer resources to address, and less political will and news coverage of, this other pandemic.1 Although many see COVID-19 as an unprecedented public health crisis that is challenging our societies and our relationships with each other in unique ways, I argue that we (...)
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  18.  8
    HIV/AIDS: The Challenging Journey.Grant Gillett - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (10):27-28.
    The journey metaphor used by Nie and colleagues (2016) can be analyzed in terms of the way in which health care professionals can support well-being and attend to the aspects of illness that often...
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  19.  15
    Gender, HIV/AIDS and Refugees. Reconceiving Vulnerability and Promoting Transformation. A Kenyan Study.Margot Claire Morris - 2005 - Dialogue: Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia. 3 (1):1-40.
  20.  46
    Hiv + /aids related bioethical issues in japan.Kazumasa Hoshino - 1995 - Bioethics 9 (3):303–308.
    Annual and cumulative incidences of HIV+ and AIDS in patients reported by the AIDS Surveillance Committee of the Ministry of Health and Welfare are cited to illustrate some characteristics in Japan: nearly 59% of either HIV+ or AIDS patients were infected through injection of blood products or by blood transfusion. A number of plaintiffs have sued the Japanese government and pharmaceutical companies since 1989, but no judicial decisions have yet been made. The incidence of HIV decreases for (...)
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  21.  23
    Hiv +/Aids Related Bioethical Issues in Japan.Kazusama Hoshino - 1995 - Bioethics 9 (3):303-308.
    Annual and cumulative incidences of HIV + and AIDS in patients reported by the AIDS Surveillance Committee of the Ministry of Health and Welfare are cited to illustrate some characteristics in Japan: nearly 59% of either HIV + or AIDS patients were infected through injection of blood products or by blood transfusion. A number of plaintiffs have sued the Japanese government and pharmaceutical companies since 1989, but no judicial decisions have yet been made. The incidence of HIV (...)
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  22.  15
    HIV/AIDS, narrative practical theology, and postfoundationalism: The emergence of a new story.Julian Müller - 2004 - HTS Theological Studies 60 (1/2).
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  23.  18
    Hiv/aids knowledge, women’s education, epidemic severity and protective sexual behaviour in low- and middle-income countries.Dana Snelling, D. Walter Rasugu Omariba, Sungjin Hong, Katholiki Georgiades, Yvonne Racine & Michael H. Boyle - 2007 - Journal of Biosocial Science 39 (3):421.
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  24. HIV/AIDS and the Point and Scope of Medical Confidentiality.Anton Vedder - 2001 - In Rebecca Bennett & Charles A. Erin (eds.), Hiv and Aids, Testing, Screening, and Confidentiality. Clarendon Press.
     
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  25.  7
    Hiv/aids – 30 years later.Udo Schüklenk - 2011 - Developing World Bioethics 11 (3):ii-ii.
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  26.  28
    Paper: HIV/AIDS and circumcision: lost in translation.Marie Fox & Michael Thomson - 2010 - Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (12):798-801.
    In April 2009 a Cochrane review was published assessing the effectiveness of male circumcision in preventing acquisition of HIV. It concluded that there was strong evidence that male circumcision, performed in a medical setting, reduces the acquisition of HIV by men engaging in heterosexual sex. Yet, importantly, the review noted that further research was required to assess the feasibility, desirability and cost-effectiveness of implementation within local contexts. This paper endorses the need for such research and suggests that, in its absence, (...)
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  27.  1
    HIV/AIDS and political controversies in modern South Africa.Martin Weinel - 2016 - Metascience 26 (1):165-168.
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  28.  71
    Ethical aspects of hiv/aids prevention strategies and control in malawi.Joseph-Matthew Mfutso-Bengo, Eva-Maria Mfutso-Bengo & Francis Masiye - 2008 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 29 (5):349-356.
    HIV/AIDS prevention campaigns have been overshadowed by conflicting, competing, and contradictory views between those who support condom use as a last resort and those who are against it for fear of promoting sexual immorality. We argue that abstinence and faithfulness to one partner are the best available moral solutions to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Of course, deontologists may argue that condom use might appear useful and effective in controlling HIV/AIDS; however, not everything that is useful is always good. (...)
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  29.  20
    Hiv/Aids Epidemic, Human Rights and Global Justice.Sirkku K. Hellsten - 2005 - Politics and Ethics Review 1 (2):197-206.
  30.  1
    Hiv/aids Epidemic, Human Rights and Global Justice.Kku K. Hellsten - 2005 - Politics and Ethics Review 1 (2):197-206.
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  31.  48
    “The Plague Of Blood”: HIV/AIDS and Ethics of the Global Health–Care Challenge.Barbara Ann Strassberg - 2003 - Zygon 38 (1):169-184.
    In this essay I explore the heuristic value of the concept of ethics of complexity, chaos, and contingency by applying its framework to the analysis of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Everyday human moral choices are outcomes of a moral impulse, and such an impulse is grounded in moral competence shaped by moral literacy. This literacy is constructed on the basis of a body of knowledge of culture, social context, environment, and the universe. It also includes the knowledge of religions and (...)
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  32. Hiv/aids education : Toward a collaborative curriculum.Jonathan Silin - 2008 - In David J. Flinders & Stephen J. Thornton (eds.), The Curriculum Studies Reader. Routledge.
     
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  33.  32
    Hiv/aids, pregnancy and reproductive autonomy: Rights and duties.Charles G. Ngwena & Rebecca J. Cook Guest Editors - 2008 - Developing World Bioethics 8 (1):iii–vi.
  34.  6
    HIV/aids und Menschenrechte.Füllkrug-Weitzel Cornelia - 2005 - Jahrbuch Menschenrechte 2006 (jg):236-244.
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  35.  6
    Hiv/aids knowledge, attitude and practice among women in the least and most hiv/aids affected regions of mainland tanzania.R. S. Katapa & D. K. Rweyemamu - 2013 - Journal of Biosocial Science 46 (2):1-10.
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  36.  21
    Equitable treatment for HIV/AIDS clinical trial participants: a focus group study of patients, clinician researchers, and administrators in western Kenya.D. N. Shaffer - 2006 - Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (1):55-60.
    Objectives: To describe the concerns and priorities of key stakeholders in a developing country regarding ethical obligations held by researchers and perceptions of equity or “what is fair” for study participants in an HIV/AIDS clinical drug trial. Design: Qualitative study with focus groups. Setting: Teaching and referral hospital and rural health centre in western Kenya. Participants: Potential HIV/AIDS clinical trial participants, clinician researchers, and administrators. Results: Eighty nine individuals participated in a total of 11 focus groups over a (...)
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  37. The Passion to Heal: A Theological Pastoral Approach to HIV/AIDS.Joseph A. Edelheit - 2004 - Zygon 39 (2):497-506.
    The global pandemic of HIV/AIDS is the most significant challenge of our time. The ongoing conversation between religion and science comes to a critical juncture in this pandemic. The global community has not yet found a vaccine or cure for this virulent virus, which will likely claim five million more lives in the coming year. The global statistics challenge even the most sophisticated imagination, with projections in the tens of millions of people dead, orphaned children, and many more living (...)
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  38.  24
    Exploring disparities between global hiv/aids funding and recent tsunami relief efforts: An ethical analysis.Timothy Christie, Getnet A. Asrat, Bashir Jiwani, Thomas Maddix & Julio S. G. Montaner - 2006 - Developing World Bioethics 7 (1):1–7.
    ABSTRACT Objective: To contrast relief efforts for the 26 December 2004 tsunami with current global HIV/aids relief efforts and analyse possible reasons for the disparity. Methods: Literature review and ethical analysis. Results: Just over 273,000 people died in the tsunami, resulting in relief efforts of more than US$10 bn, which is sufficient to achieve the United Nation’s long‐term recovery plan for South East Asia. In contrast, 14 times more people died from HIV/aids in 2004, with UNAIDS predicting a (...)
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  39.  15
    Community without communitarianism: HIV/aids research, prevention and treatment in Australia and the developing world.Deborah Zion - 2005 - Monash Bioethics Review 24 (2):20-31.
    The advent of HIV focussed broad social attention on the group of people most affected by it in Australia, the so-called ‘gay community’. However, what a gay community actually was, and what kind of rights and duties were being attached to it remained unclear. However, it is obvious that such a community — or communities — did not fit the model proposed by communitarian writers like Michael Sandel and Charles Taylor, whereby subjects cannot stand outside their own constitutive attachments. I (...)
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  40.  26
    HIV/AIDS and Bioethics: Historical Perspective, Personal Retrospective. [REVIEW]Charles S. Bryan - 2002 - Health Care Analysis 10 (1):5-18.
    Problems posed by HIV/AIDS differ from those ofpast epidemics by virtue of unique propertiesof the causative agent, dramatic societalchanges of the late 20th century, and thetransition of medical practice from aprofessional ethic to a technology-dependentbusiness ethic. HIV/AIDS struck during thecoming-of-age of molecular biology and also ofbioethics, and the epidemic stimulated thegrowth of both disciplines. The number ofarticles published about AIDS and ethics (asidentified by a MEDLINE search) peaked in 1990,just before the peak incidence of AIDS in (...)
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  41.  31
    Narrating fragile stories about HIV/AIDS in South Africa.Steven P. Black - 2013 - Pragmatics and Society 4 (3):345-368.
    This article analyzes narratives about living with HIV/ AIDS amid stigma, using the notion of “fragile stories” to further detail the linguistic practices through which people narrate experiences in danger of not being told. The article is based on fieldwork in 2008 in Durban, South Africa with a Zulu gospel choir in which all group members are living with HIV/AIDS. Close analysis of recorded narratives demonstrates how institutional story frameworks and the normative performance of gender helped storytellers to (...)
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  42.  19
    HIV/AIDS as an Epidemic: Ethical Issues at the 20th Anniversary. [REVIEW]Robert M. Sade - 2002 - Health Care Analysis 10 (1):1-4.
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  43.  10
    What Should HIV/AIDS be Called in Malawi?Adamson S. Muula - 2005 - Nursing Ethics 12 (2):187-192.
    HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the southern African country of Malawi. At the largest referral health facility in Blantyre, the Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, the majority of patients hospitalized in medical wards and up to a third of those in the maternity unit are infected with HIV. Many patients in the surgical wards also have HIV/AIDS. Health professionals in Blantyre, however, often choose not to write down the diagnosis of HIV or AIDS; (...)
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  44.  19
    Corporate Responses to HIV/AIDS: Experience and Leadership from South Africa.Pamela L. Bolton - 2008 - Business and Society Review 113 (2):277-300.
    ABSTRACTHIV/AIDS harms the viability and competitiveness of African businesses. As a consequence, companies increasingly subscribe to the view that taking a proactive role to combat HIV/AIDS is not simply a question of compassion and good corporate citizenship. Rather, these firms see assertive action against HIV as critical to their long‐term profitability, and some have concluded that it is cost effective even in the short term. The article discusses how South African companies are taking action against HIV in ways (...)
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  45.  11
    Guessing, Economy, Epidemiology: The HIV/AIDS Hypothesis.Mark Tschaepe - unknown
    Of the scientific concepts that the American philosopher, Charles S. Peirce, analyzed in his work, two of the less commonly investigated have been those of guessing and of scientific economy. Peirce argued that guessing was the initial moment of hypothesis-formation. He also argued that economic factors play a significant role in the development and acceptance of hypotheses; however, the relationship between these two concepts has been neglected in most philosophical and scientific literature. In the following, I provide an analysis of (...)
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  46.  15
    Confidentiality and HIV/AIDS in South Africa.L. R. Uys - 2000 - Nursing Ethics 7 (2):158-166.
    Keeping the diagnosis of a client confidential is one of the cornerstones of professional practice. In the case of a diagnosis such as HIV/AIDS, however, the ethics of this action may be challenged. Such a decision has a range of negative effects, for example, the blaming of others, supporting the denial of the client, and complicating the health education and care of the patient. It is suggested that the four ethical principles should be used to explore the ethics of (...)
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  47.  12
    FOCUS: The ethics of HIV/AIDS and the workplace.David Goss - 1993 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 2 (3):143–148.
    How should companies handle the issue of HIV/AIDS and cope with the ethical dilemmas which result? Should they adopt a defensive policy or aim for a more humanistic policy? Dr Goss is Senior Lecturer in Organizational Behaviour in the University of Portsmouth Business School.
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  48.  20
    Constitutional Values and HIV/AIDS in the Workplace: Reflections on Hoffmann v South African Airways.Charles Ngwena - 2001 - Developing World Bioethics 1 (1):42-56.
    South Africa is experiencing an HIV/AIDS epidemic of enormous proportions. The workplace, like all the other sectors, is adversely affected. The tendency of a significant proportion of employers has been to discriminate against employees and job applicants living with HIV/AIDS through use of HIV testing to exclude those that are HIV‐positive. In the case of Hoffmann v South African Airways, the Constitutional Court was asked to determine the constitutionality of excluding a job applicant on account of an HIV‐positive (...)
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  49.  9
    Impact of HIV/AIDS, Malaria, and HIV/Malarial Coinfection in Pregnant Women in Zambia and Zimbabwe.Camille A. Clare, Lisa Weingrad & Padmini Murthy - 2014 - Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine 5 (3):193-205.
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  50.  24
    The impact of HIV/AIDS on poverty and education in Africa.Ravinder Rena - unknown
    This article deals with the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic on poverty and education in Africa. It considers the scale and scope of the pandemic and its anticipated impact on education systems in heavily infected sub-Saharan African countries. It looks for lessons derived from twenty years of coping with HIV/AIDS in the Southern African Development Community region. The paper concludes by suggesting how the education sector can improve its management response to the pandemic in order to protect education (...)
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