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Code of ethics
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The article was published on 2013-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1321 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Ethical code.read more
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Physician participation in executions, the morality of capital punishment, and the practical implications of their relationship.
TL;DR: Even though the United States Supreme Court has signaled that physician participation in executions is not constitutionally required, lawmakers in death penalty states must consider the ethics of physician involvement.
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In Search of an Informed Supervisory Practice: An Exploratory Study
Kieran O'Donoghue,Ming-sum Tsui +1 more
TL;DR: This paper explored the concept of an informed supervisory practice through a literature review and study of 18 social work supervisors' perspectives about what informed their supervisory practices, and found that the supervisors were informed by their experiences of supervision, concepts and ideas from social work practice theory and supervision models.
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International Immersion in Belize: Fostering Counseling Students' Cultural Self-Awareness.
TL;DR: The authors examined the impact of an international immersion on graduate counseling students' cultural self-awareness using a qualitative approach and found that four major cultural selfawareness themes emerged from the analysis of participants' journals: discrimination and prejudice, cultural pride and appreciation, cultural sensitivity, and selfawareness.
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Qualitative investigation of the speech-language therapy experiences of individuals who covertly stutter.
TL;DR: The evidence suggests individualized therapy based on each client's unique manifestation of covert stuttering is beneficial; while, fluency-focused stuttering therapy is often incongruent with the needs of persons who covertly stutter.
Supervisee Experiences of Corrective Feedback in Clinical Supervision: A Consensual Qualitative Research Study
TL;DR: P Phelps et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated supervisee experiences of corrective feedback in clinical supervision during predoctoral psychology internship and found that participants expected to receive corrective feedback, and they held largely positive expectations/beliefs about corrective feedback.