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Research Ethics in Exercise, Health and Sports Sciences puts ethics
at the centre of research in these rapidly expanding fields of
knowledge. Placing the issues in historical context, and using
informative case studies, the authors examine how moral theory can
guide research design, education, and governance. As well as
theoretical analysis, key practical concerns are critically
discussed, including: informed consent anonymity, confidentiality
and privacy plagiarism, misappropriation of authorship, research
fraud and 'whistleblowing' ethics in qualitative research
vulnerable populations trans-cultural research. Providing an
accessible and robust theoretical framework for ethical practice,
this book challenges students, researchers and supervisors to adopt
a more informed and proactive approach to ethics in exercise,
health and sports research. This insightful text will be of great
interest to those taking a kinesiology, human movement, sport
science or sport studies degree course.
Research Ethics in Exercise, Health and Sports Sciences puts ethics
at the centre of research in these rapidly expanding fields of
knowledge. Placing the issues in historical context, and using
informative case studies, the authors examine how moral theory can
guide research design, education, and governance. As well as
theoretical analysis, key practical concerns are critically
discussed, including: informed consent anonymity, confidentiality
and privacy plagiarism, misappropriation of authorship, research
fraud and 'whistleblowing' ethics in qualitative research
vulnerable populations trans-cultural research. Providing an
accessible and robust theoretical framework for ethical practice,
this book challenges students, researchers and supervisors to adopt
a more informed and proactive approach to ethics in exercise,
health and sports research. This insightful text will be of great
interest to those taking a kinesiology, human movement, sport
science or sport studies degree course.
This book contains a foreword by Elliot G Mishler - professor of
Social Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical
School. Patients' views of their identity change with illness, as
do health professionals' views of them. This book discusses how and
why this happens, and examines how more awareness of this
phenomenon can lead to better care. Providing examples from diverse
clinical settings, "The Self in Health and Illness" brings together
writers from a range of backgrounds including health science,
anthropology, sociology, psychology, nursing, medical ethics and
healthcare. It considers the narrative self (or constructions of
identity) and its place within healthcare and the medical
humanities, and assists in clarifying the understanding of 'self'
in the context of illness, health and medicine. An enlightening
read for all doctors, especially those with an interest in medical
humanities, this anthology is also invaluable for undergraduate and
postgraduate students of medical humanities, researchers in health
sciences and medical ethics. It will also be of great interest to
medical anthropologists, psychologists, psychiatrists and other
healthcare professionals. 'If you ask people questions about their
lives they tell stories that express some version of "who" they
are. Within the healthcare field, narrative researchers from
various health professions and social science disciplines have been
particularly interested in the potential impact of disability and
illness on patient identities. What we find here is an array of
quite systematic approaches to the complexities with which people
narrate, perform, and possibly transform their identities through
their stories. This is a serious undertaking and the editors and
authors of these papers treat it with deep respect for our common
struggle to make sense of our lives by achieving identities we can
live with.' - Elliot G Mishler, in the Foreword.
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