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Wendy A Rogers
Researcher at Macquarie University
Publications - 187
Citations - 4436
Wendy A Rogers is an academic researcher from Macquarie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Evidence-based medicine. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 187 publications receiving 3681 citations. Previous affiliations of Wendy A Rogers include University of Edinburgh & Australian School of Advanced Medicine.
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BookDOI
Vulnerability : new essays in ethics and feminist philosophy
TL;DR: Mackenzie as discussed by the authors discusses the importance of relational autonomy and capabilities for an Ethics of Vulnerability in Kantian Ethics and the task of reparations for sexual violence. But she does not discuss the role of personal vulnerability in moral theory.
Journal ArticleDOI
No Surgical Innovation Without Evaluation: Evolution and Further Development of the IDEAL Framework and Recommendations
Allison Hirst,Yiannis Philippou,Jane M Blazeby,Bruce Campbell,Marion K Campbell,Joshua Feinberg,Maroeska M. Rovers,Natalie S Blencowe,Christopher Pennell,Tom Quinn,Wendy A Rogers,Jonathan Cook,Angelos G. Kolias,Riaz Agha,Philipp Dahm,Art Sedrakyan,Peter McCulloch +16 more
TL;DR: This article updates and extends the IDEAL Recommendations, identifies areas for future research, and discusses the ethical problems faced by investigators at each IDEAL stage, to widen the practical use of IDEAL.
Journal ArticleDOI
Why bioethics needs a concept of vulnerability
TL;DR: The concept of vulnerability is under-theorized in the bio-ethics literature as discussed by the authors, which is why bioethics needs an adequately theorized and nuanced conception of vulnerability.
Journal ArticleDOI
The challenge of overdiagnosis begins with its definition
Stacy M Carter,Wendy A Rogers,Iona Heath,Christopher J Degeling,Jenny Doust,Alexandra Barratt +5 more
TL;DR: S M Carter and colleagues argue that the authors should use a broad term such as too much medicine for advocacy and develop precise case by case definitions of overdiagnosis for research and clinical purposes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Trust in the health system: An analysis and extension of the social theories of Giddens and Luhmann
TL;DR: The role that social factors (such as socio-economic status, class and age) play in an individual's willingness to trust is explored in this paper, where the authors demonstrate a need for further empirical research into the multidimensionality of trusting relationships, while suggesting new directions for research in public health.