Search for dissertations about: "personal integrity"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 30 swedish dissertations containing the words personal integrity.
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1. Patients' Conceptions of Integrity within Health Care Illuminated from a Gender and a Personal Space Boundary Perspective
Abstract : The aims of this licentiate thesis were to explore and describe female and male patients’ conceptions of integrity within health care and to illuminate the conceptions from a gender as well as a personal space boundary perspective. A qualitative design with a phenomenographic approach was used. READ MORE
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2. Personal service environments : Openness and user control in user-service interaction
Abstract : This thesis describes my work with making the whole experience of using electronic services more pleasant and practical. More and more people use electronic services in their daily life — be it services for communicating with colleagues or family members, web-based bookstores, or network-based games for entertainment. READ MORE
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3. Upholding Older Adults' Innate and Inherent Dignity within a Caring Context
Abstract : In the ethical ideals of autonomy and integrity reducing the level of abstraction is necessary in order to more easily be able to follow them in every day care practices. This is especially true concerning the effort of upholding older adult patients dignity. READ MORE
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4. Live life! Young peoples' experience of living with personal assistance and social workers' experiences of handling LSS assessments from a child perspective
Abstract : The Act Concerning Support and Services to Persons with Certain Functional Impairments, in which the provision of personal assistance (PA) is included, came into force in 1994. It paved the way for strengthened rights for people with disabilities, in which the overall intention was to give disabled people equal opportunities and enable full participation in society. READ MORE
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5. Autonomy and integrity : drivers of health care professionals dealing with multiple obligations
Abstract : The medical services have undergone substantial changes over the past decades, and the design and content of health care have been determined by economic programmes, streamlining, and rationalization. The calls to cut costs and implement reorganizations have come largely from politicians and have been handled by middle and high-level managers. READ MORE