Nursing and Midwifery Council (2004) The NMC code of professional conduct; standards for conduct, performance and ethics…
Registered nurses have a moral and legal responsibility to uphold a patient’s rights in relation to their personal health care. An important nursing standard of practice speaks to the registered nurse acting as a patient advocate.…
Leukemia is a neoplastic disease that involves the bloodforming tissues of the bone marrow, spleen, and lymph nodes. In…
The evidence-based practice guideline that I chose is titled, “Myocardial Infarction,” written by the Finnish Medical Society Duodecim. The intended users for this guideline are health care providers and physicians. The target population is individuals with suspected or known myocardial infarction. The objective of this guideline is to “collect, summarize, and update the core clinical knowledge essential in general practice” and “describe the scientific evidence underlying the given recommendations.” (Finnish Medical Society Duodecim, 2008)…
Recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine that Advanced Nurse Practitioners provide cost efficient treatment and as competent as physicians. However, physicians and Advanced Nurse Practitioners have different roles but complement each other in patient quality care. Advanced Nurse Practitioners role in the 1960s and 1970s due to a shortage of primary care physicians in underserved areas, especially rural areas. I just don’t understand how come now it is a problem for Advanced Nurse Practitioners to practice as independent. Ken Miller, the AANP Co-president stated that 70% of patients are supportive of NPs to have more responsibilities in a statement she made last…
NURSES ASSOCIATION OF BRONSWICK. (2000). standards for the therapeutic nurse-client relationship. Available: http://www.nanb.nb.ca/PDF/practice/Standards_for_the_therapeutic_Nurse-Client_Relationship_English.pdf. Last accessed 28th April 2012…
‘‘ Professor Dickon Weir-Hughes, chief executive and registrar, Nursing and Midwifery Council ‘‘ The Health Professions Council (HPC) is committed to protecting the public and ensuring that professionals are meeting UK standards for their training, professional skills, behaviour and health. Unison’s Duty of Care Handbook provides a useful accompaniment to the HPC’s guidance and standards, and assists in maintaining good practice across the health and social care setting. ‘‘ Marc Seale, chief executive and registrar, Health Professions Council Foreword By Dave Prentis…
Nurses are provided guidelines for how to approach the care of patients in the American Nurses Association Code of Ethics, but they are just that, guidelines. It is simply a map to help navigate some of the more difficult decisions that are necessary for a nurse to make. Ethics, in nursing, is based on individual interpretation. A person’s values shape their individual approaches to patients and patient care. The ANA document does not tell or indicate what is an absolute right or wrong. Each and every nurse has to make those decisions individually. Ethical knowledge and guidelines help a nurse maneuver through personal/professional relationships, to give safe and ethical care in an ever-changing healthcare system.…
Professional conduct refers to the manner in which a person behaves while acting in a professional capacity. It is generally accepted that when performing their duties and conducting their affairs professionals will uphold exemplary standards of conduct, commonly taken to mean standards not generally expected of lay people or the ‘ordinary person in the street’.1 The Code of Professional Conduct for Nurses in Australia is supported by the Code of Ethics for Nurses in Australia. This Code of Professional Conduct for Nurses sets the minimum standards for practice a professional person is expected to uphold both within and outside of professional domains in order to ensure the ‘good standing’ of the nursing profession. These two companion Codes, together with other published practice standards (eg competency standards, decision-making frameworks, guidelines and position statements), provide a framework for legally and professionally accountable and responsible nursing practice in all clinical, management, education and research domains.2 The support and assistance of Royal College of Nursing, Australia and the Australian Nursing Federation in developing this edition of the Code of Professional Conduct for Nurses in Australia is acknowledged. In considering this Code and the Code of Ethics for Nurses in Australia, it should be borne in mind that they are designed for multiple audiences: nurses; nursing students; people requiring or receiving nursing care; other health workers; the community generally; employers of nurses; nursing regulatory authorities; and consumer protection agencies.…
The Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia (NMBA) which is also supported by the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency, (AHPRA) have created several guiding documents. The guiding documents: The Code of Ethics; The Code of Professional Conduct; The registered nurse standards of practice; The Nurses’ guide to professional boundaries and The Social Media Policy, were all created to direct and guide Registered Nurses and Nursing Students of Australia, throughout their practices and on clinical placements. In doing this, it set a certain type of standard that needs to be followed and used throughout everyday practices in the Nursing line of work. According to NMBA, these documents were all created with one “key role, which is to always…
One of the most significant aspects of nursing care is the social contract between the profession and the society it serves. This contract focuses on nursing’s commitment to the core values and ethical standards that support the general health of the population (The ANA, 2010). According to the ANA’s Nursing’s Social Policy…
The American Nursing Association (ANA), describes the practice of nursing as being the; “Who, What, Where, When and How of nursing practice”, (ANA 2004 p. 99). These words describe the function of standards of care that we as practitioners are accountable for. According to the ANA, “Has assumed the responsibility for developing generic standards that apply to all professional nurses”, (ANA, 2004 p.99). These standards serve as guidelines in which our competency can be measured. The six standards of practice, describe a competent level of nursing care known as the nursing process, the components of the nursing process is as follows; assessment, diagnosis, outcomes identification, planning, implementation, and evaluation.…
There is little doubt that nursing in Australia has undergone significant changes since its early colonial origins over two years ago when caring for the sick was widely considered to be a task suitable only of those of criminal and social disrepute (Schultz, 1991) Since these early beginnings, Australian nursing has progressed gradually through what can be considered a social, educational, technological, political and professional revolution. Modern nursing represents this progression, and as a result, the role of the contemporary nurse has expanded considerably from what was once traditionally the fulfillment of predominantly domestic duties performed at the instruction of the doctor.…
As Registered Nurses in the United States of America, we have all experienced passing board exams and having to apply for licensure applicable to each of our individual states. The board exams now known as NCLEX or National Council Licensure Examination are universal across the country. However, individual licensing requirements for a renewal or reapplication process differ from state to state. Some states such as Texas have additional testing requirements such as the Texas Nursing Jurisprudence Exam while others do not (http://www.bon.texas.gov/olv/je.html). Each state has an individual scope of practice for nurses and each defines their own licensing requirements. While there are differences in licensure requirements as well as scope of practice, the one thing that every state has in common is that policy, regulation and change are all influenced by professional associations including many professional nursing associations (Public Sector Consultants, 2012, p. 7-11).…
In the Code of Conduct 2012, certain values and principals have been put in place to help the nurses carry out professional conduct in practice. There are eight principals which have been based on the four underlying values of ethical nursing; respect, trust, partnership and integrity. The fourth principle of the code instructs RNs to ‘Maintain health consumer trust by providing safe and competent care’. In 4.5 of this principle, nurses are strongly advised to ask for advice and assistance from colleagues whenever the care of a patient may be compromised by either a lack of knowledge or skill (NCNZ, 2012). This standard related to Jo because in her situation she lacked knowledge and the right to prescribe. Instead of taking the situation into…