
Contents
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The GPs and their practices The GPs and their practices
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The Hackney Road Practice, London, United Kingdom: Dr Jeremy Chu and Dr Malcolm Carter The Hackney Road Practice, London, United Kingdom: Dr Jeremy Chu and Dr Malcolm Carter
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The Wilford Practice, Wilford, Lower Flinders Ranges, Australia: Dr Jack Day and Dr Mira Singh The Wilford Practice, Wilford, Lower Flinders Ranges, Australia: Dr Jack Day and Dr Mira Singh
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The Adelaide Road Practice, Milton, Lower Flinders Ranges, Australia: Dr Jenny Morrow The Adelaide Road Practice, Milton, Lower Flinders Ranges, Australia: Dr Jenny Morrow
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The St Andrew's Practice, Dunedin, New Zealand: Dr David Mackenzie, Dr John Buchan and Dr Amy Walker The St Andrew's Practice, Dunedin, New Zealand: Dr David Mackenzie, Dr John Buchan and Dr Amy Walker
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The Gordon Road Surgery, Glasgow, Scotland: Dr Fiona McDonald and Dr David Grainger The Gordon Road Surgery, Glasgow, Scotland: Dr Fiona McDonald and Dr David Grainger
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References References
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Cite
Extract
General practice is at the heart of health services around the world. GPs are the point of first contact for patients, and the conduit through which other forms of medical care may be accessed. They have multiple obligations—to patients in their care, to government for responsible use of resources, to communities for the standard of health services provided. Ethics is also at the heart of health services because ethics deals with fundamental questions about what ought to be valued, including health and health services, and why we ought to value particular things. In this book we bring together these two ‘hearts’ in a textbook on practical ethics for general practitioners.
This book has three main aims. First, we wish to help GPs appreciate the ethically significant nature of general practice, and to draw attention to the ethical complexity of apparently mundane and everyday experience. Many of the issues and cases we discuss will be familiar to GPs and, in some cases, they may appear to raise little of ethical importance at all. We want, first and foremost, to raise awareness of the fact that ethics pervades all areas of general practice.
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