Olson, L. (2010). Provision Six. In Guide to the Code of Ethics for Nurses (p. 72). Silver Spring ,…
The 1st piece of writing I chose was the Spartan Creed written by a man known as Tyrtaseus. Before even reading this I knew that it was going to be an interesting piece because Sparta basically only lived to fight and if you didn’t you became a slave if you were weak. Tyrtaseus was a well-known 7th century poet (PS19). What made this piece even more interesting was that Tyrtaseus was a General in the war against Messenia (PS19). In this war the “Helots” were captured and taken as slaves and they served in Sparta (PS19). This document known as the Spartan’s Creed was written in 650 BCE (PS19). Most of the thing that Tyrtaseus wrote were made into fighting songs, so when the Spartans went to war they would sing many of the things that he wrote…
The Olaudah Equiano’s recount of the horror of slavery is one of the most detailed, and one of the best document that really show us the brutality of the transatlantic slave trade. Olaudah Equiano was an African slave from west Africa, who is according to the document was kidnapped from his homeland Benin at the age of 10, and was sold as slave. After being sold many time in Europe, Equiano was shipped to Barbados and then Virginia, and then after he gained his freedom, Equiano wrote a book solely based on his experience across the atlantic.…
There are nine provisions included in the ANA code of ethics. The provisions can be broken into three categories. The first category is the nurse’s ethical responsibilities to her patient which is provisions one through three. Second is the nurse’s obligation to herself, provisions four through six. The third ethical requirement for nurses is related to their relationship to the nursing profession, community, nation, and world overall. This focus is summarized in provisions seven through nine [ (American Nurses Association, 2013) ].…
This document, titled Frosh Camp @ Camp NaCoMe, has multiple different features and lots of information. The title itself is formatted in a certain way for a reason. The words “Frosh Camp” are very bold and in Memphis blue; whereas the words “@ Camp NaCoMe” are in grey and much less bold. The author of this document made it this way because Frosh Camp is the main subject and is meant to be more noticed than the location of the camp. Because the background of the main part of the advertisement is white, the blue stands out even more. Besides the title, the first thing you notice is the two large pictures in the foreground at the top of the page. These pictures show Frosh Camp campers in 1994 and 2012. They are inside a green circle to represent a fun atmosphere verses placing the pictures in the standard square. In the background there are a few, big light blue polka dots the author placed just to add a little more fun and color to the page. The 2012 picture shows people of all different types and ethnicities. With an audience of University of Memphis 2012 freshman, this is a very good thing to show because people won’t worry about fitting in. Next, your eyes guide to the text underneath. With the words “You”, “hundred years”, and “never forget” being bolded in the sentence, that alone makes you curious about the camp.…
As discussed, nurses face many challenges related to ethical and legal issues. The American Nurses Association Code of Nursing Ethics is the best guideline for nurses to use when facing these issues. Personal and societal values will also influence nurses faced with these issues but if nurses adhere to the Code of Ethics even though personal or societal values may be in conflict, they will not have to worry about legal issues pertaining to the care…
The American Nursing Association (ANA) is a professional organization that supports over 3.1 million nursing professionals in the areas by providing high standards of nursing practice, supporting the rights of nurses in the workplace, exhibiting a progressive and sincere view on nursing, and by raising awareness regarding regulatory agencies on health care issues affecting nurses and the public. (American Nurses Association, 2013) In 2001, the ANA presented its updated version of the Code of Ethics for the nursing field. (Bosek & Savage, 2007, p.57) The Code of Ethics contains nine provisions which illustrate the responsibilities the nurse should emulate while upholding professional ethical practices and providing quality care and for her patients, their families and his/her colleagues. (American Nurses Association, 2013)…
The ethical issues in nursing as well as the situations where such issues arise are being encountered by health practitioners on a daily basis. It is about time that nurses and nursing students learn how to manage and confront these kinds of situations in a professional manner. Expertise on the management of ethical issues in nursing should be given utmost importance in this day and age.…
Faced with ethical and legal decisions on a daily basis, nurses must at times make some pretty tough decisions including how to proceed with care for an incapacitated patient with no advanced directive or how to proceed when called upon to testify against a current employer. The American Nurses Association Code of Nursing Ethics is one of the main tools available for the nurse to utilize when it comes to making these tough decisions. The nurse may apply personal values as well as societal values to these cases in order to come to a sound, ethical decision. The nurse also carries a legal responsibility to their profession, workplace, patients, and self. Ethical and legal decision-making are complex but after a thorough assessment, the nurse can continue to make an ethically and legally sound judgment on how to proceed.…
The Code of Ethics for Nursing, as written by the American Nurses Association, contains nine provisions. “The first three describe the most fundamental values and commitments of the nurse: the next three address boundaries of duty and loyalty, and the last three address aspects of duties beyond individual patient encounters” (American Nurses Association, 2001).…
By using the theories learned through nursing education and practical experience nurses gain insight and use this to formulate answers to ethical questions. There are times when additional resources are needed. “Ethics committees in health care institutions should be educational and advisory in purpose. Generally, the function of the ethics committee should be to consider and assist in resolving unusual, complicated ethical problems involving issues that affect the care and treatment of patients within the health care institution.”(American Medical Association [AMA], 1994, ¶ 2) The recommendations given by an ethics committee do not have to be followed, but it is encouraged that those recommendations be given serious consideration. Ethics committees are typically made up of physicians, nurses and other providers of healthcare…
Osborn, K., Watson, A. & Wraa, C. (2009). Ethical and Legal Guidelines for Nursing Practice.…
The American colonists took up arms in 1775 when the British attacked in the Battle of Lexington and Concord. The battle, however, was a long time coming, with tensions beginning to rise because of the many duties and acts passed by the British Parliament. A few of these include the Stamp Act, the Mutiny Acts, and the Townshend duties. The Americans expressed outrage over the many taxes that they were forced to pay, and as each act passed, more and more Americans began to believe that the only way to gain freedom was to go to war. One major event believed to be the impetus of the Revolutionary War is the Boston Massacre, in which British soldiers fired upon and killed five American colonists. However, about a month or so before the Battle of Lexington and Concord, Patrick Henry wrote his speech “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death”, in which he expressed his willingness to fight the British. Similarly, a few months after the battle, Thomas Jefferson wrote his “Declaration of the Causes and Necessities of Taking Up Arms”. Although written at different times, both Jefferson and Henry believed the same thing. There was not a workable compromise between the British and the American colonists.…
As nursing professionals we must be guided by the Code of Ethics, which governs and guides us in the right way we should behave as professionals. According to the ANA there are nine provisions that rule the practice of the profession. These are: Autonomy that is the right to choose what happens to our own self. One must be capable to comprehend completely the informed information to make a choice with the four important components liberty, self-determination, independence and agency. Beneficence is the action one take to promote good and the obligation to assist others. Is one of the core values in health care ethics. Nonmaleficence were one should not do any harm and or impose risk of harm. Veracity one should always tell the truth. Giving…
Nurses are faced with ethical dilemmas constantly. Knowing the code of ethics can assist the…