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1.
Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd ; 83(10): 1221-1234, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37808257

ABSTRACT

Purpose The aim was to develop evidence-based recommendations where possible. The guideline presents the medical principles and scientific evidence for indications, counselling of affected persons, performing terminations, the choice of method, and the care and monitoring of a terminated pregnancy up until week 12 + 0 of gestation p. c. Methods In accordance with the requirements for an S2k-guideline, the contents of the guideline were drafted following a systematic search of the literature by a representative interdisciplinary group of experts. Guideline authors held several formal meetings under the auspices of the German Society for Gynaecology and Obstetrics (DGGG) during which the contents of the guideline were finalised and agreed upon. Recommendations The guideline provides recommendations on the surgical termination of pregnancy and follow-up care after termination of pregnancy.

2.
Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd ; 83(10): 1205-1220, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37808261

ABSTRACT

Purpose The aim was to develop evidence-based recommendations where possible. The guideline presents the medical principles and scientific evidence for indications, the counselling of affected women, performing terminations, the choice of method, and the care and monitoring of a terminated pregnancy up until week 12 + 0 of gestation p. c. Methods In accordance with the requirements for S2k-guidelines, the contents of the guideline were drafted following a systematic search of the literature by a representative interdisciplinary group of experts. Guideline authors held several formal meetings under the auspices of the German Society for Gynaecology and Obstetrics (DGGG) during which the contents of the guideline were finalised and agreed upon. Recommendations A total of 61 recommendations are provided, covering care structures, provision of information and counselling to support decision-making, the measures to be taken before terminating the pregnancy, and medical termination of the pregnancy.

3.
GMS J Med Educ ; 38(1): Doc28, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33659633

ABSTRACT

Ethics teaching in medicine, nursing and other health care professions does not only consist of knowledge transfer that can be easily implemented digitally. Rather, it focuses on specific ethical competences (such as arguing and articulating one's own moral position) and attitudes (such as empathic patient orientation, critical self-reflection, and ambiguity tolerance), for whose development interactive formats are superior. Competence-oriented ethical learning goals are important for the development of professionalism, but require time, space and personal exchange. Due to contact restrictions and the widespread cancellation of (face-to-face) courses in the wake of the corona pandemic, ethics teaching was forced to keep its distance in many places, which posed great challenges. This article is based on an exchange of experiences from members of the working group ethik learning of the Academy for Ethics in Medicine about ethics teaching in times of physical distancing. Recommendations will be given on how ethical competence can be successfully taught in the context of exclusively digital teaching. Starting with the question what is at risk of being lost in digital teaching, the potentials of digital formats are explored and illustrated with concrete practical examples. Beyond ethics teaching, the article also aims to provide ideas and suggestions for other specialist and cross-sectional areas where interactive formats are central.


Subject(s)
Education, Distance , Education, Medical , Ethics , Physical Distancing , Professional Competence , Curriculum , Education, Distance/ethics , Education, Medical/standards , Humans
4.
Bioethics ; 35(6): 499-507, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33389764

ABSTRACT

Slippery slope-, taboo-breaking- or Nazi-analogy-arguments are common, but not uncontroversial examples of the complex relationship between bioethics and the various ways of using historical arguments in these debates. In our analysis we examine first the relationship between bioethics and medical history both as separate disciplines and as argumentative practices. Secondly, we then analyse six common types of historical arguments in bioethics (slippery slope-, analogy-, continuity-, knockout/taboo-, ethical progress- and accomplice-arguments), some as arguments within the academic debate of bioethics, others as arguments within political and public debates over bioethical issues. We conclude by suggesting to bioethicists to better understand historical arguments as socially and culturally embedded practices of critical reflection of power, medical and government paternalism and possible future scenarios. More interdisciplinarity between ethicists and medical historians is needed to appropriately rationalize and understand the different legacies.


Subject(s)
Bioethics , Bioethical Issues , Ethicists , Humans , Morals , Violence
6.
Med Confl Surviv ; 30(4): 276-94, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25310677

ABSTRACT

This article compares the gender and health politics of the German and the French medical professions, which incorporated military command structures into their civilian self-conception. Mobilized doctors committed themselves to the new circumstances and opportunities offered by the war. They applied the established military spatial 'map' which distinguished between the male-dominated front and the female-dominated home front and turned it into an epidemiological map, identifying danger zones which arose from points of contact between men and women. The analysis singles out two case studies: the rapid spread of venereal disease and psychiatric disorders. These case studies allow for a comparative analysis of the following questions: How did doctors assess the impacts of the war on the individual and the society as a whole? How did they view the war's impact on conventional gender orders, individual and national health? And how did they see their own role as a part of an independent civilian profession?


Subject(s)
Military Medicine/history , World War I , Combat Disorders/history , Female , France , Germany , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/history
7.
J Community Genet ; 5(1): 81-7, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24203529

ABSTRACT

Members of the scientific and medical communities concerned with genetic testing might wonder, why cultural and ethical analyses of genetic testing are increasing again, especially since legal frameworks have, by now, come to provide more solid grounds for the routine application of genetic testing on both levels of application, diagnostics, and prediction. This contribution aims to shed light on the changing concept of genetic testing as it is raised by novel cultural practices and perceptions mainly triggered by direct-to-consumer predictive testing, including the phenomenon of a new genetic exceptionalism "from below". We are seeking to determine what is at stake in this practice and what consequences arise from it for the medical and scientific community. What exactly happens as we move from diagnostic to prognostic medicine? Above all, this article pivots on the notion of captious certainties, a concept, which we will elaborate on as our argument progresses.

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