Question | Answer |
Accuntability | Taking responsability for your actions,being answerable |
Attentude | A manner of thought or feeling expressed in a persona's behavior |
Autonomy | Independence, personal liberty |
Behavior | What people do and say |
Care of Ethics | A set of standards for behavior based on values |
Confidentislity | Portecting the privacy of any confidential information, either spoken or written |
Damages | Monetary compensation awarded by a court for an injury caused by the act of another |
Defendant | The person against whom a civil or criminal action is braught |
Deposition | Pretial statemant of a witness under oath, taken in question-and-anwer form, as it would be in court, with opportunity given to the adverdary to be present to cross-examine |
Discrimination | Seeing a difference; prejudicial treatment of a person |
Empathy | Capacity to share and undertand the feelings or ideas of another |
Ethic | Behavior that is based on values(beliefs); how we make judgments in regard to right and wrong |
Evidence | All the meand by which any alleged natter of fact; the truth of which is submitted to investigaton at trial , is established or disproved; evidence includes the testimony of witnesses and the introduction of record, documents, exhibition, object, or any o |
Expert Witness | A eitness who has special knowledge of the subject about which he or she is to testify; the knwledge must generally be such as is not normally possessed by the average person |
Fidelity | Doing what one promises |
Hostile Environment | A sexually oriented atmosphere or pattern of behavior that is determinied to be sexual harassment |
Implied Contact | A nonexplicit agreement that impacts some aspect of the employment relationship |
Informed Consent | A doctrine that state that befor a patient is aked to consent to a risky or invasive diagnostic or treatment produre he or she is entitled to receive certain information. |
Liabelity | The condition of being responsible either for damages resulting from an injurious act or from discharging an obligation of debt |
Medical Malpractice | PRofessional negligence of a heath care professional; failure to provide"good and accepted medical care" |