Bioethics

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Across
  1. 3. Imposes a duty to not cause harm, injuries, or unnecessary pain to the patient.
  2. 4. Copying individual genes
  3. 6. Requires healthcare providers to act in the best interest of the patient, balancing benefits against risks.
  4. 9. People have the right to make their own choices
  5. 11. The ethical and legal obligation of healthcare providers to protect patient information from unauthorized disclosure
  6. 14. Making a full genetic copy of an organism
  7. 15. An ethical and legal process where a patient voluntarily confirms their willingness to receive medical treatment after understanding all risks, benefits, and alternatives.
  8. 16. Moral choices as they apply to the biological sciences
Down
  1. 1. Provide guidelines for the responsible conduct, design, and reporting of studies, ensuring integrity, accountability, and the protection of human/animal subjects
  2. 2. An organism whose DNA has been altered for specific traits
  3. 5. Ethical principle of faithfulness, loyalty, and keeping promises to patients, forming a cornerstone of trust-based care
  4. 7. Ensures healthcare and research organizations adhere to moral principles, legal standards, and regulations, prioritizing patient safety, data privacy, and ethical research conduct
  5. 8. Using genes to treat or prevent disease, often by inserting a healthy copy of a faulty gene.
  6. 10. The direct manipulation of an organism's DNA using biotechnology to alter its traits
  7. 12. The intentional, painless termination of a patient's life to relieve suffering from incurable, terminal illness
  8. 13. Treat people fairly by demanding the fair, equitable, and appropriate distribution of health resources and treatment regardless of background.