
We agree with Faunce's proposal that academic legitimacy is important in ensuring that whistle-blowing is included in medical curricula. We disagree, however, with the assertion that this is best achieved by means of an over-arching theoretical foundation for health care whistle-blowing of the kind suggested by Faunce. We propose that systematic theoretical justification is neither the sole nor the main determinant of academic legitimacy when it comes to matters for inclusion in medical school curricula, and outline an alternative view, together with a practical example of a healthcare whistle-blowing topic.
Principle-Based Ethics, Education, Medical, Whistleblowing, 2201 Applied Ethics, Virtues, Humans, Ethics, Medical, Curriculum, Ethical Theory, 1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
Principle-Based Ethics, Education, Medical, Whistleblowing, 2201 Applied Ethics, Virtues, Humans, Ethics, Medical, Curriculum, Ethical Theory, 1199 Other Medical and Health Sciences
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