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Jacqueline Chin

Researcher at National University of Singapore

Publications -  18
Citations -  291

Jacqueline Chin is an academic researcher from National University of Singapore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medical ethics. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 18 publications receiving 263 citations. Previous affiliations of Jacqueline Chin include University Health System & National University of Health Sciences.

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How can we know that ethics education produces ethical doctors

TL;DR: It is suggested that medical ethics education should give attention to the problems of evaluation of ethics curricula as the discipline comes of age, and more specific outcomes in these areas of medical students’ ethical development are described.
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Where families and healthcare meet

TL;DR: It is shown how, according to an ethics of families, responsibilities must be negotiated against the backdrop of family relationships, treatment decisions must be made in the light of these negotiated responsibilities and justice must be served, both between families and society more generally and within families themselves.
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Evolving legal responses to dependence on families in New Zealand and Singapore healthcare

TL;DR: This paper outlines how two common law jurisdictions, New Zealand and Singapore, have accommodated, or are responding to, changes in healthcare decision-making which appear to stem from an increasing emphasis on relational aspects of autonomy.
Journal Article

Evaluating the effects of an integrated medical ethics curriculum on first-year students.

TL;DR: The pioneer biomedical ethics curriculum had significant effects on the ethical development of fi rst-year medical students, with significantly greater receptiveness towards ethical codes of the profession and the regulatory role of the Singapore Medical Council.
Journal Article

Palliative Sedation within the Duty of Palliative Care within the Singaporean Clinical Context

TL;DR: This article will adopt an adaptation of the definitions of PS that seeks to place a specific therapeutic window that delineates its applicability to patients with a prognosis of two weeks given the efficacy of prognostication using prognostic tools available to physicians and the chances of significantly attenuating life is diminished.