The Meaning of “Do No Harm”: A Medical Student Perspective

Authors

  • Dale S. DiSalvo Medical student, Penn State Hershey College of Medicine, United States.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/ijms.2015.120

Keywords:

NA

Abstract

NA

Metrics

PDF views
319
Jul 2015Jan 2016Jul 2016Jan 2017Jul 2017Jan 2018Jul 2018Jan 2019Jul 2019Jan 2020Jul 2020Jan 2021Jul 2021Jan 2022Jul 2022Jan 2023Jul 2023Jan 2024Jul 2024Jan 2025Jul 2025Jan 202614
|
HTML views
88
Jul 2015Jan 2016Jul 2016Jan 2017Jul 2017Jan 2018Jul 2018Jan 2019Jul 2019Jan 2020Jul 2020Jan 2021Jul 2021Jan 2022Jul 2022Jan 2023Jul 2023Jan 2024Jul 2024Jan 2025Jul 2025Jan 20268
|
Other format views
10
Jul 2015Jan 2016Jul 2016Jan 2017Jul 2017Jan 2018Jul 2018Jan 2019Jul 2019Jan 2020Jul 2020Jan 2021Jul 2021Jan 2022Jul 2022Jan 2023Jul 2023Jan 2024Jul 2024Jan 2025Jul 2025Jan 20264.0
|

Author Biography

Dale S. DiSalvo, Medical student, Penn State Hershey College of Medicine, United States.

Dale Di- Salvo is currently a thirdyear medical student at the Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine in Hershey, PA, USA out of a four-year medical school curriculum.

References

1. Cassel EJ. The nature of suffering and the goals of medicine. N Engl J Med. 1982 Mar 18;306(11):639–45.
2. Groopman, J. The anatomy of hope: how people prevail in the face of illness. New York: Random House Publishing Group; 2005.
3. Fischer S, Min SJ, Cervantes L, Kutner J. Where do you want to spend your last days of life? Low concordance between preferred and actual site of death among hospitalized adults. J Hosp Med. 2013 Apr;8(4):178–83.

Published

2015-03-16

How to Cite

DiSalvo, D. S. (2015). The Meaning of “Do No Harm”: A Medical Student Perspective. International Journal of Medical Students, 3(1), 65–66. https://doi.org/10.5195/ijms.2015.120

Issue

Section

Experience

Categories