1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910672398103321

Autore

Blas Orbán Carmen

Titolo

El equilibrio en la relación médico-paciente [[recurso electronico]] / Carmen Blas Orbán

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Barcelona, : Bosch Editor, 2006

ISBN

1-5129-1306-5

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (294 p.)

Soggetti

Médicos

Responsabilidad

Physician and patient

Medical laws and legislation

Lingua di pubblicazione

Spagnolo

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di contenuto

El equilibrio en la relación médico-paciente; Página Legal; Índice; Introducción; I. Relación médico-paciente; 1.1. Generalidades; 1.2. Obligación del médico. Cumplimiento de la ""lex artis""; 1.2.1. Diligencia debida; 1.2.2. Deber de cuidado; 1.2.3. Deber de información; 1.3. Contenido de la obligación del médico; 1.3.1. Medicina curativa o necesaria; 1.3.2. Medicina voluntaria o satisfactiva; 1.4. Responsabilidad profesional; 1.4.1. Error de diagnóstico; 1.4.1.1. Jurisprudencia; II. La voluntad del paciente en la asistencia sanitaria; 2.1. Generalidades.

2.7.3. Consentimiento por representación2.7.4. Consentimiento del menor en caso de aborto; III. El deber de información como elemento intrínseco del consentimiento; 3.1. Jurisprudencia; 3.2. Titular del derecho a la información; 3.2.1. Renuncia a recibir información; 3.2.2. Situaciones derivadas de incapacidad; 3.2.3. Situaciones excepcionales. Necesidad terapéutica; 3.3. Contenido de la información; 3.3.1 Límites del contenido de la información; 3.3.2 Circunstancias de lugar y forma; 3.4. Carga de la prueba; 3.5. Comentarios generales

IV. Atención sanitaria en la sanidad pública. Responsabilidad4.1. Aspectos generales; 4.1.1. Antecedentes normativos; 4.1.2. Evolución jurisprudencial; 4.2. Presupuestos de la responsabilidad patrimonial; 4.3. Extensión de la obligación de indemnizar; 4.4. Responsabilidad del



médico de atención primaria; 4.4.1. Diferencias sustanciales dentro del ejercicio de la medicina; 4.5. Indemnización de daños al paciente; 4.6. Jurisprudencia. Tribunal de lo Contencioso-administrativo; 4.6.1. Destacable importancia de la lex artis; V. Conclusiones; Bibliografía y Documentación

2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910960738103321

Autore

Stillwell John

Titolo

Geometry of Surfaces / / by John Stillwell

Pubbl/distr/stampa

New York, NY : , : Springer New York : , : Imprint : Springer, , 1992

ISBN

1-4612-0929-3

Edizione

[1st ed. 1992.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (XI, 236 p.)

Collana

Universitext, , 2191-6675

Disciplina

516.3/62

Soggetti

Geometry

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

"With 165 Figures."

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

1. The Euclidean Plane -- 1.1 Approaches to Euclidean Geometry -- 1.2 Isometries -- 1.3 Rotations and Reflections -- 1.4 The Three Reflections Theorem -- 1.5 Orientation-Reversing Isometries -- 1.6 Distinctive Features of Euclidean Geometry -- 1.7 Discussion -- 2. Euclidean Surfaces -- 2.1 Euclid on Manifolds -- 2.2 The Cylinder -- 2.3 The Twisted Cylinder -- 2.4 The Torus and the Klein Bottle -- 2.5 Quotient Surfaces -- 2.6 A Nondiscontinuous Group -- 2.7 Euclidean Surfaces -- 2.8 Covering a Surface by the Plane -- 2.9 The Covering Isometry Group -- 2.10 Discussion -- 3. The Sphere -- 3.1 The Sphere S2 in ?3 -- 3.2 Rotations -- 3.3 Stereographic Projection -- 3.4 Inversion and the Complex Coordinate on the Sphere -- 3.5 Reflections and Rotations as Complex Functions -- 3.6 The Antipodal Map and the Elliptic Plane -- 3.7 Remarks on Groups, Spheres and Projective Spaces -- 3.8 The Area of a Triangle -- 3.9 The Regular Polyhedra -- 3.10 Discussion -- 4. The Hyperbolic Plane -- 4.1 Negative Curvature and the Half-Plane -- 4.2 The Half-Plane Model and the Conformai Disc Model -- 4.3 The Three Reflections Theorem -- 4.4 Isometries as Complex Functions -- 4.5 Geometric Description of Isometries -- 4.6 Classification of Isometries -- 4.7 The Area of a Triangle -- 4.8 The



Projective Disc Model -- 4.9 Hyperbolic Space -- 4.10 Discussion -- 5. Hyperbolic Surfaces -- 5.1 Hyperbolic Surfaces and the Killing-Hopf Theorem -- 5.2 The Pseudosphere -- 5.3 The Punctured Sphere -- 5.4 Dense Lines on the Punctured Sphere -- 5.5 General Construction of Hyperbolic Surfaces from Polygons -- 5.6 Geometric Realization of Compact Surfaces -- 5.7 Completeness of Compact Geometric Surfaces -- 5.8 Compact Hyperbolic Surfaces -- 5.9 Discussion -- 6. Paths and Geodesies -- 6.1 Topological Classification of Surfaces -- 6.2 Geometric Classification ofSurfaces -- 6.3 Paths and Homotopy -- 6.4 Lifting Paths and Lifting Homotopies -- 6.5 The Fundamental Group -- 6.6 Generators and Relations for the Fundamental Group -- 6.7 Fundamental Group and Genus -- 6.8 Closed Geodesic Paths -- 6.9 Classification of Closed Geodesic Paths -- 6.10 Discussion -- 7. Planar and Spherical Tessellations -- 7.1 Symmetric Tessellations -- 7.2 Conditions for a Polygon to Be a Fundamental Region -- 7.3 The Triangle Tessellations -- 7.4 Poincaré’s Theorem for Compact Polygons -- 7.5 Discussion -- 8. Tessellations of Compact Surfaces -- 8.1 Orbifolds and Desingularizations -- 8.2 Prom Desingularization to Symmetric Tessellation -- 8.3 Desingularizations as (Branched) Coverings -- 8.4 Some Methods of Desingularization -- 8.5 Reduction to a Permutation Problem -- 8.6 Solution of the Permutation Problem -- 8.7 Discussion -- References.

Sommario/riassunto

Geometry used to be the basis of a mathematical education; today it is not even a standard undergraduate topic. Much as I deplore this situation, I welcome the opportunity to make a fresh start. Classical geometry is no longer an adequate basis for mathematics or physics-both of which are becoming increasingly geometric-and geometry can no longer be divorced from algebra, topology, and analysis. Students need a geometry of greater scope, and the fact that there is no room for geometry in the curriculum un­ til the third or fourth year at least allows us to assume some mathematical background. What geometry should be taught? I believe that the geometry of surfaces of constant curvature is an ideal choice, for the following reasons: 1. It is basically simple and traditional. We are not forgetting euclidean geometry but extending it enough to be interesting and useful. The extensions offer the simplest possible introduction to fundamentals of modem geometry: curvature, group actions, and covering spaces. 2. The prerequisites are modest and standard. A little linear algebra (mostly 2 x 2 matrices), calculus as far as hyperbolic functions, ba­ sic group theory (subgroups and cosets), and basic topology (open, closed, and compact sets).