They differ in that:
The Qur'an is the words of Allah (God) and the Sunnah is the actions of the Prophet Muhammad.
There is one version of the Qur'an. If you look at any copy of the Qur'an, you will not see any difference between the Qur'an
The Sunnah is what was reported by people living during the Prophet's time There are different levels for the accuracy of it.
When acknowledging the patient's religious or political beliefs in a healthcare setting there are pros and cons. One of the benefit is that in regard to the religious setting it can help the patient spiritually like in the case of a cancer patient. If one trust God then it can provide a positive attitude that can be of help in the treatment. Another benefit can be one can respect another religion for example in the case of a Muslim that is admitted,the dietary can provide a no pork meal. Meanwhile, the cons would be the life of a patient can be endangered like in the case of a Jehovah's witness that do not believe in blood transfusion. Another would be if someone does not believe in medical treatment but only through natural method,it can then hasten the treatment of a client.
Answer:
Self-serving bias
Explanation:
Complete Question:
In one study, teachers whose students performed well attributed the outcome to their teaching ability, and teachers whose students performed poorly attributed the outcome to student inability. This represents the: self-serving bias
A. self-serving bias
b. attribution style
c. situational attribution
d. locus of control
Self-serving bias or behavior is a habit or likelihood of an individual to attribute or taking credit, responsibility for positive outcomes relating it as a result of their ability, character but criticize, condemn and attribute the negative event to the external occurrence. This is done to increase one's self-esteem; the motive to maintain a positive self-image, called self-enhancement. It has been shown that most time people tend to attribute bad results to their own activities, taking the blame for other' failures.