What's the difference between deontologist and deontology?

Deontologist


Definition:

  • (n.) One versed in deontology.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Gillon concludes that many utilitarians agree with deontologists that respect for autonomy is required if human welfare really is to be maximized.
  • (2) It has been defended by utilitarians and deontologists alike, not as a moral end in itself, but as a means to a desirable end such as the general welfare, respect for autonomy, or respect for privacy.
  • (3) Deontologists, arguing from the Kantian principles of moral duty and respect for persons, hold that it is wrong to subject anyone to the risks of research that is not designed for the subject's benefit.
  • (4) Requests for tissues must pass through the Tissue Bank, and its establishment has helped some deontologists (absolutist) to come to terms with the need for fetal tissue transplantation.

Deontology


Definition:

  • (n.) The science relat/ to duty or moral obligation.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) An attempt is made to discuss deontological problems, related with pharmacological treatment of malignant tumors, according to the traditions of N.N.
  • (2) Methods of the verification of deontological training of students in medical institutes were specified.
  • (3) Gillon outlines the principles of the deontological, or duty-based, group of moral theories in one of a series of British Medical Journal articles on the philosophical foundations of medical ethics.
  • (4) In order to assure to patients medical data privacy, the MIM is of opinion that deontological and legal rules concerning access to identifiable medical data in automated information systems shall be the same as those that are applicable to conventional medical records.
  • (5) Gillon rejects each of these arguments, contending that avoiding deceit is a basic moral norm that can be defended from utilitarian as well as deontological points of view.
  • (6) The epidemiologist is concerned with the scientific ethic which is duty-based, related to deontology or to rule utilitarian theories of ethics.
  • (7) Deontological problems are of major importance in the adequate treatment of patients with diseases of the nervous system.
  • (8) DEONTOLOGICAL: Modern medicine is oriented toward health maintenance and promotion, thus including prevention.
  • (9) The article includes up-to-date references to the Brazilian Code of Deontology (1984) and the Code of Medical Ethics (1988), as well as to the Civil and Criminal Codes.
  • (10) The possibility of eliciting hypnoid states under the physical methods of treatment is discussed together with their therapeutic application and arising deontological problems.
  • (11) The present paper gives a deontological argument for allowing children to be subjects in certain types of research.
  • (12) In daily practice physicians are professionally obliged to interpret ethical precepts and laws in emergency situations under extreme pressure when resuscitation measures leave little or no time to consider deontological issues.
  • (13) A number of deontological problems connected with hypnosis are dealt with and the practical aspects discussed.
  • (14) The dialectic unity of inductive and deductive methods in mastering the fundamentals of deontology was stressed.
  • (15) Practically, the questions of deontology are not working out in the sphere of military medical rating (expertise).
  • (16) The ethical values of nurse-nursing task relationships slightly took up deontological position.
  • (17) Two distinct ethical positions are highlighted as being fundamental to the understanding of resource allocation in this sector -- deontological and utilitarian theories of ethics.
  • (18) Deontological aspects of occupational pathology in otorhinolaryngology are deeply involved in physician's activities, beginning with preliminary and regular medical examinations and ending with determination of the relationship between disease and occupation, development of therapeutic recommendations and subsequent rehabilitation.
  • (19) This article outlines the historical development of such committees by reviewing some celebrated cases and also categorizes the committees as ethical-praxeological, legal-scientific, or deontological-technical, according to their functions and structure.
  • (20) Other aspects are also discussed, such as: extension of the prophylactic orientation in the curative stomatological practice, and the avoidance of iatrogenic lesions and diseases, which are frequent in the stomatological practice; the ergonomic organization of the working place, and of the work methods, reduction of the risks involved in contracting or transmitting to or from the patients of various diseases, prophylaxis of occupational diseases in stomatologists, prophylaxis of aspects, attitudes or behaviour which are against etichal and deontological principles of the profession, as well as the necessity for a better preparation from the prophylactic viewpoint of stomatologists and their coworkers in view of coping with increased competence and efficiency with the increased demands of stomatological assistance of the population.

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