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Journal ArticleDOI

Confidentiality and Personal Integrity

Andrew Edgar
- 01 Jun 1994 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 2, pp 86-95
TLDR
This paper uses the social theory of Erving Goffman to argue that confidentiality should be understood in relation to the mundane social skills by which individuals present and respect specific self-images of themselves and others during social interaction.
Abstract
This paper uses the social theory of Erving Goffman in order to argue that confidentiality should be understood in relation to the mundane social skills by which individuals present and respect specific self-images of themselves and others during social interaction. The breaching of confidentiality is analysed in terms of one person's capacity to embarrass another, and so to expose that person as incompetent. Respecting confidentiality may at once serve to protect the vulnerable from an unjust society, and yet also protect the guilty from just accusation. Ethical reasoning about confidentiality must therefore recognize the dangers of prejudice and violence inherent in decisions to breach or to respect confidentiality. Case studies are used to illustrate the efficacy of this account, culminating with analyses of three examples from the UKCC document Confidentiality.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Privacy: a review of the literature.

TL;DR: In this review, a description about the perspectives and dimensions of the concept will be made and empirical studies in the area will be analysed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Talking about suicide Confidentiality and anonymity in qualitative research

TL;DR: The case study of the authors’ experience of gaining ethics approval for a research project that asks people what it is like to feel suicidal is used to analyse the limits of confidentiality and anonymity and consider the ways in which the process of ethics review can shape and constrain suicide research.
Journal ArticleDOI

The art of touching: The culture of 'body work' in nursing

TL;DR: It is argued that touch in nursing has a double meaning: on the one hand, it is a utilitarian and technical activity in which the bodies of nurses and patients are objects; on the other hand, touching is intimate, emotional and human and the bodiesof both actors are subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI

The management of embarrassment and sexuality in health care

TL;DR: The literature on embarrassment, the related topics of delicacy and privacy, and the implications for nursing and medical practice are discussed, drawing on empirical data from an observational study of fertility clinics plus other studies involving consultation and/or examination relating to sexual issues.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Limits of Confidentiality

TL;DR: The discussion proposes, therefore, two additional grounds for confidentiality in order to clarify, in general terms, the scope of this obligation (i.e. to clarify at what point confidentiality can be said to have been broken).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Embarrassment and social organization.

TL;DR: Embarrassment occurs whenever an individual is felt to have projected incopatible definition of himself before those present as discussed by the authors, and it occurs at certain places in a social establishment where incop compatible principles of social organization prevail In the forestalling of conflict between these principles, embarrassment has its social function
Journal ArticleDOI

Public Bodies, Private Selves

TL;DR: In this paper, a patient whose case notes had been used, without her permission, during a disciplinary inquiry on the conduct of Wendy Savage (her obstetrician) complained that this was a breach of confidentiality.
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