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1 paź 2008 · ethical stakes in parasitology: accounting the complexity of the field of intervention, putting the principle of justice into practice and managing the changing context of research.
From the present analysis, it emerged three main issues which characterize ethical stakes in parasitology: accounting the complexity of the field of intervention, putting the principle of justice into practice and managing the changing context of research.
Ethics is a crucial branch in medicine guiding good medical practice. It deals with the moral dilemmas arising due to conflicts in duties/obligations and the faced consequences. They are based on four fundamental principles, i.e., autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice.
Covering all areas of veterinarian and human parasitology in alphabetical order; Clearly structured essays with extensive cross-references between definitions and related articles; Easy to use - information can easily be retrieved
3 lip 2023 · A definition of parasitism is essential in teaching parasitology and in textbooks to summarize the general features – so-called ‘laws’ (Poulin, Reference Poulin 2007a) – of parasitism, particularly to specify the range of validity of the statements, hypotheses and predictions.
public health programs implies many ethical consequences, the range of specific questions in parasitology that can be attributed to bioethics remains, to a large extent, unexplored. From the present analysis, it emerged three main issues which characterize ethical stakes in parasitology: accounting the complexity of the
The crucial problem is the social value of an individual's dignity and the conjoined question of the admissibility of an exploitation of a creature. The responsibility of man for other organisms, in that particular case parasites and their hosts, is brought up for discussion in a bioethic debate.