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- Medical English LInking keywords finder for the PubMed Zipped Archive (ELIZA) -

return kwic search for patient out of >500 occurrences
1057411 occurrences (No.2 in the rank) during 5 years in the PubMed. [no cache] 500 found
235) In this paper I get clearer on the considerations that ought to inform the evaluation and development of medico-legal competency criteria-where this is taken to be a question regarding the abilities that ought to be needed for a patient to be found competent in medico-legal contexts.
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PMID:23807736 DOI:10.1007/s10728-013-0258-z
2015 Health care analysis : HCA : journal of health philosophy and policy
* Evaluating medico-legal decisional competency criteria.
- In this paper I get clearer on the considerations that ought to inform the evaluation and development of medico-legal competency criteria-where this is taken to be a question regarding the abilities that ought to be needed for a patient to be found competent in medico-legal contexts. In the "Decisional Competency in Medico-Legal Contexts" section I explore how the question regarding the abilities that ought to be needed for decisional competence is to be interpreted. I begin by considering an interpretation that takes the question to be asking about the abilities needed to satisfy an idealized view of competent decision-making, according to which decisional competency is a matter of possessing those abilities or attributes that are needed to engage in good or effective or, perhaps, substantially autonomous or rational decision-making. The view has some plausibility-it accords with the way decisional competency is understood in a number of everyday contexts-but fails as an interpretation of the question regarding the abilities that should be needed for decisional competence in medico-legal contexts. Nevertheless, consideration of why it is mistaken suggests a more accurate interpretation and points the way in which the question regarding the evaluation of medico-legal competency criteria is to be answered. Building on other scholarly work in the area, I outline in the "Primary and Secondary Requirements" section several requirements that decisional competence criteria ought to satisfy. Then, in the "Applying the Framework" section, I say something about the extent to which medico-legal competency criteria, as well as some models of decisional competency proposed in the academic literature, fulfil those requirements.
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(1)52 with (17)4 MSCs (33)3 subsequently (49)2 motivation
(2)30 was (18)4 education (34)2 Education (50)2 of
(3)20 *null* (19)4 presenting (35)2 achieved (51)2 outcome
(4)18 and (20)4 required (36)2 age (52)2 pain
(5)15 had (21)4 safety (37)2 as (53)2 population
(6)12 who (22)4 to (38)2 assessment (54)2 population,
(7)11 care (23)4 were (39)2 being (55)2 received
(8)7 is (24)3 characteristics (40)2 can (56)2 remained
(9)7 survival (25)3 comfort (41)2 computational (57)2 remains
(10)7 underwent (26)3 died (42)2 data (58)2 reported
(11)6 developed (27)3 group (43)2 days (59)2 response
(12)6 outcomes (28)3 information (44)2 empowerment (60)2 responses
(13)6 satisfaction (29)3 life (45)2 factors, (61)2 symptoms
(14)5 groups (30)3 on (46)2 for (62)2 the
(15)5 in (31)3 postoperative (47)2 immunomigration
(16)5 presented (32)3 referral (48)2 including

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--- WordNet output for patient --- =>がまん強い, 忍耐強い, 辛抱強い, 根気よく働く, 患者, 病人, 忠者 Overview of noun patient The noun patient has 2 senses (first 1 from tagged texts) 1. (73) patient -- (a person who requires medical care; "the number of emergency patients has grown rapidly") 2. affected role, patient role, patient -- (the semantic role of an entity that is not the agent but is directly involved in or affected by the happening denoted by the verb in the clause) Overview of adj patient The adj patient has 1 sense (first 1 from tagged texts) 1. (3) patient -- (enduring trying circumstances with even temper or characterized by such endurance; "a patient smile"; "was patient with the children"; "an exact and patient scientist"; "please be patient") --- WordNet end ---