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The ethics of basing community prevention in general practice
Michael Weingarten
*
,
Andre Matalon
*
Corresponding author for this work
Clinical Departments
Rabin Medical Center Israel
Tel Aviv University
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
5
Scopus citations
Overview
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Keyphrases
Ethics
100%
General Practice
100%
Preventive Medicine
100%
Community-based Prevention
100%
General Practitioners
33%
Conflict of Interest
16%
Community-based
16%
High Risk
16%
Doctor-patient Relationship
16%
Sick
16%
High Expectations
16%
Health Promotion
16%
Quality Indicators
16%
Traditional Healing
16%
Patient-centered Approach
16%
Equitable Allocation
16%
Staff Time
16%
Staff Resources
16%
Inaccurate Data
16%
Health Gap
16%
Medicine and Dentistry
Preventive Medicine
100%
General Medicine
100%
General Practitioner
33%
Medicine
16%
Health Promotion
16%
Consultation
16%
Physician
16%
Doctor Patient Relation
16%
Nursing and Health Professions
Preventive Medicine
100%
General Practice
100%
General Practitioner
33%
Physician
16%
Doctor Patient Relation
16%
Social Sciences
Preventive Medicine
100%
General Practitioner
33%
Cooperatives
16%
Personnel
16%
Community-Based
16%
Health Promotion
16%
Conflict of Interest
16%
Psychology
Practitioners
100%
Conflict of Interest
50%
Health Promotion
50%