Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care.
Publication
, Journal Article
Curlin, FA
Published in: Narrat Inq Bioeth
2014
The stories in this collection can be described as stories of transgression. The writers have learned that public expressions of religious faith or reasoning are to be kept separate from the practices of caring for patients. Mixing the two is dangerous. Yet, as the stories indicate, many health practitioners cannot help themselves: their religion comes through, shaping their encounters with patients in all manner of ways. Religion comes through not as a distraction from medicine but as integral to their efforts to care well for their patients.
Duke Scholars
Published In
Narrat Inq Bioeth
DOI
EISSN
2157-1740
Publication Date
2014
Volume
4
Issue
3
Start / End Page
221 / 226
Location
United States
Related Subject Headings
- Religion and Medicine
- Religion
- Patient Care
- Humans
- Attitude to Health
- 5001 Applied ethics
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Curlin, F. A. (2014). Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care. Narrat Inq Bioeth, 4(3), 221–226. https://doi.org/10.1353/nib.2014.0061
Curlin, Farr A. “Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care.” Narrat Inq Bioeth 4, no. 3 (2014): 221–26. https://doi.org/10.1353/nib.2014.0061.
Curlin FA. Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care. Narrat Inq Bioeth. 2014;4(3):221–6.
Curlin, Farr A. “Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care.” Narrat Inq Bioeth, vol. 4, no. 3, 2014, pp. 221–26. Pubmed, doi:10.1353/nib.2014.0061.
Curlin FA. Holy transgressions: breaching the wall between public religion and patient care. Narrat Inq Bioeth. 2014;4(3):221–226.
Published In
Narrat Inq Bioeth
DOI
EISSN
2157-1740
Publication Date
2014
Volume
4
Issue
3
Start / End Page
221 / 226
Location
United States
Related Subject Headings
- Religion and Medicine
- Religion
- Patient Care
- Humans
- Attitude to Health
- 5001 Applied ethics