Academic literature on the topic 'Physician-researcher'

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Journal articles on the topic "Physician-researcher"

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Tierney, William M., and Elizabeth D. McKinley. "When the Physician-Researcher Gets Cancer." Medical Care 40, Supplement (2002): III—20—III—27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00005650-200206001-00004.

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Neitzke, G., and St Hoffmann. "Gustav Adolph Michaelis – Physician, Researcher, Teacher." Der Gynäkologe 32, no. 8 (1999): 660–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/pl00003279.

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Pine, Donald. "Becoming a Community-Based Physician Researcher." Journal of Primary Care & Community Health 12 (January 2021): 215013272110366. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21501327211036617.

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Years ago, as a contented community family physician practicing with 4 physician colleagues, I focused on applying medical knowledge to help patients. After a young patient’s death from smoking I became interested in improving our strategy for helping smokers quit. A researcher offered us the opportunity to test a cessation intervention that had been successful in an academic setting. I was concerned that this study would interfere with my patient care duties until I visited a practitioner researcher in Wales. I was inspired and worked with a research professional to build colleague support and carry out this project. After this gratifying experience I had similar experiences working with other research teams. As an ordinary practitioner I had expanded my role to become significantly involved in research. In this role I was working with a team to improve patient care. It was a fundamental change that brought me great satisfaction.
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Kim, SuYoung. "Negligence of Physician-Researcher in Clinical Trial." Korean Journal of Medicine and Law 23, no. 2 (2015): 225. http://dx.doi.org/10.17215/kaml.2015.12.23.2.225.

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Mills, Joanna M. Z., Andrzej S. Januszewski, Bruce G. Robinson, Caroline L. Traill, Alicia J. Jenkins, and Anthony C. Keech. "Attractions and barriers to Australian physician-researcher careers." Internal Medicine Journal 49, no. 2 (2019): 171–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.14086.

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Mosesso, Vincent N., and Paul M. Paris. "A TRIBUTE TOPETERSAFAR, MD: PHYSICIAN, RESEARCHER, MENTOR, VISIONARY, HUMANIST." Prehospital Emergency Care 8, no. 1 (2004): 76–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/312703003824.

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Meeta, Meeta, and Vishal Tandon. "Real World Evidence — Need for Physician-Scientist/Clinician-Researcher." Journal of Mid-life Health 12, no. 2 (2021): 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jmh.jmh_105_21.

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Hisamichi, Shigeru. "For Education to be a Good Physician and aMedical Researcher." TRENDS IN THE SCIENCES 6, no. 5 (2001): 21–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.5363/tits.6.5_21.

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Shepherd, Lois, and Margaret Foster Riley. "In Plain Sight: A Solution to a Fundamental Challenge in Human Research." Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 40, no. 4 (2012): 970–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-720x.2012.00725.x.

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The physician-researcher conflict of interest, a long-standing and widely recognized ethical challenge of clinical research, has thus far eluded satisfactory solution. The conflict is fairly straightforward. Medical research and medical therapy are distinct pursuits; the former is aimed at producing generalizable knowledge for the benefit of future patients, whereas the latter is aimed at addressing the individualized medical needs of a particular patient. When the physician-researcher combines these pursuits, he or she serves two masters and cannot — no matter how well-intentioned — avoid the risk of compromising the duties owed in one of the professional roles assumed. Because of the necessary rigidity of a research protocol, the more demanding of the two masters is frequently the research.The problem of the physician-researcher conflict has been evident since the first attempts to regulate human research in the United States. Otto E. Guttentag, a physician at the University of California School of Medicine in San Francisco, addressed the conflict in a 1953 Science magazine article.
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Kruszewski, Stefan P., Richard P. Paczynski, and Marzana Bialy. "State Medical Board Responses to an Inquiry on Physician Researcher Misconduct." Journal of Medical Regulation 94, no. 1 (2008): 16–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.30770/2572-1852-94.1.16.

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ABSTRACT Misconduct in clinical research jeopardizes the integrity of medical science. Physician researcher misconduct that produces flawed results has consequences, including the subsequent inability of other physicians who rely on erroneous data to provide informed consent and/or accurate assessment of pharmaceutical and medical device efficacy and safety. This deviation from acceptable medical practice can directly harm patients. How state medical boards address this clinical problem is uncertain. To examine this issue, we asked 51 U.S. medical boards to search their databases for disciplinary action in response to physician researcher misconduct (PRM) from 1996 thru early 2007. We compared their responses with data from federal agencies responsible for disciplinary actions against clinical researchers. Our results demonstrated: i) a high percentage (45 percent) of U.S. medical boards indicated that they did not have or could not provide access to data adequate to address whether or not disciplinary action for PRM had been levied in their states and ii) of respondents able to make relevant information available, we identified only 13 cases of physician disciplinary action for PRM. In contrast, several dozen examples of disciplinary action against physicians for serious clinical research misconduct could be readily documented in publicly accessible data from federal regulatory agencies.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Physician-researcher"

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Berrisford, Isabelle C. "Dual Agency of Physician-Researchers: The Role of Equipoise in RCTs in Preserving the Integrity of the Physician-Researcher Role During Public Health Crises." The Ohio State University, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1619164005499914.

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Books on the topic "Physician-researcher"

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Adamache, Killard Walter. Unique physician identification number (UPIN) validation studies: Researcher edits. Health Economics Research, Inc., 1994.

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S, Spitzer Cindy, ed. Wilson's Way: Win don't whine. Book Surge Pub., 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Physician-researcher"

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Levine, Robert J. "The Physician—Researcher." In Alzheimer’s Dementia. Humana Press, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-5174-3_4.

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"The Toxic Impact of Life Behind Bars." In Community Resilience, edited by Alonzo L. Plough. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197559383.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 unpacks some key components of the damaging environment of prison and considers what a different approach to incarceration might look like. Researcher Jim Parsons provides an overview of the health impacts of incarceration, while Sara Wakefield offers new data on family history of incarceration and opportunities to mitigate the effects. Physician Homer Venters describes the lack of comprehensive health outcomes data, and designer and researcher Regina Yang Chen addresses the influence of prison design on the health and well-being of residents, staff, and the community. Finally, Kempis Songster, released from prison after serving 30 years for a murder he committed at age 15, grounds the narrative in lived experience. All are united in their call to reimagine the ways our country responds to crime and the role of incarceration.
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Graham Kennedy, Ashley. "Practicing Diagnostic Justice." In Diagnosis. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190060411.003.0007.

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Via an analysis of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, this chapter addresses the various uses of diagnostic testing that go beyond clinical patient care, such as the promotion of public health (via either prevention strategies or research studies). Furthermore, it addresses the question of what to do when diagnostic tests are scarce: For the physician, testing allocations should be made, in the first instance, on the basis of the needs of the individual patient, and societal concerns should be considered to be secondary. For a medical researcher, on the other hand, the priority is reversed: When acquisition of knowledge is the primary goal, considerations of individual patients and their care will necessarily be secondary.
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Henrichsen, Colleen. "Government Agencies." In A Field Guide for Science Writers. Oxford University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195174991.003.0048.

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A medical resident was on duty at New York Hospital one night in 1979 when a 27-year-old security guard was admitted with a rare form of pneumonia. As inexperienced as the resident was, he knew that this very rare condition was usually diagnosed only in people with a history of cancer, organ transplantation, or other conditions involving immune system suppression. This otherwise healthy young man had none of those. Weeks later, when the resident presented this case at inner-city rounds, a number of hands shot up. These clinicians had seen similar cases. The resident's report of this New York City outbreak was one of three that formed the basis for the first published report of the disease we would come to know as AIDS. Three years later, this physician, Dr. Henry Masur, arrived at the National Institutes of Health where he joined established NIH researchers already anxiously trying to understand this deadly new condition. At key communications offices on the NIH campus, phones were ringing incessantly. Reporters all around the world wanted to know what NIH was doing about it. As public communicators, we were learning about the disease along with the researchers. Why did it seem to disproportionately affect gay men? Why were people with the disease dying from ordinary infections? We were learning the answers to these questions as they unfolded, translating what we learned into plain English, and getting the information out to the public. A prominent AIDS researcher came into the office of one of my colleagues, sat next to her, and made a simple drawing of how immune cells appeared to be affected by the new virus, explaining it to her at the same time scientists themselves were just beginning to understand it. Dr. Masur is now chief of the Critical Care Medicine Department of the NIH Clinical Center. I covered his account of his first meeting with an AIDS patient for an NIH employee newsletter when he delivered the NIH Astute Clinician Lecture in 2002, which honors scientists who observe and investigate unusual clinical occurrences.
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