Bartering Ethical Dilemma Name: Tutor: Introduction Bartering Bartering involves exchange of goods and services; this has been a part of human beings since the beginning‚ even before gold or money was used as an exchange. This is common with poor customers who need a service or product without money but have something in exchange. This has been a part of numerous culture and communities norms as an acceptable method of compensation as well as‚ economic exchange.(Zur‚ 2005) Bartering
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almost impossible. With no obvious answer‚ you must decide between the lesser of two evils from an ethical standpoint. While there may be tough decisions to be made‚ you need to ask yourself the obvious question as well as the tragic one. A situation may seem tragic‚ but a truly tragic situation is only when it involves moral wrongdoing. Choosing to eat at home vs eating with your friend for example would be an obvious question. While it may be tough for you decide what to do‚ neither of your choices
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The ethical dilemma is to explain to Mr. Ostacolo that Sam has always had an interest in physical activity‚ but because he is only mobile in a wheelchair‚ he has been denied many opportunities to pursue such interests. Most importantly‚ Sam wants the community center to organize and run a wheelchair basketball league. As for the community center‚ they refuse to allow Sam to play and do not have any money for a wheelchair basketball league. In this case‚ I do believe the deontological theory works
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Based on the Decision Making Model: 1. Identify the Problem: See Ethical Dilemma Handout 2. Potential Issues Involved: Maria is a minor No signed Informed Consent Dual Relationship/ Neighbor Rape Underage Drinking Possible Pregnancy and/or STD Self mutilation Rural community‚ cultural differences Maria (client) asks not to inform parent/ legal guardian for fear of his reaction. Father approaches therapist in an unprofessional setting and wants to information regarding
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medical- ethical dilemma through my clinical assignment in pediatrics. My patient was a 3 month old female who was born dead. Apparently the mother suffered Placenta Abruptio‚ it is unknown how long the fetus suffered with hypoxia before birth. Nurses claim this infant was born dead. CPR was performed for more than 15 minutes before the heart started. Needless to say the baby was then placed on life support. A determination was made that the infant is brain dead. The major dilemma is that the
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choose to make unethical decisions. For example‚ someone who is above the age of 18 or 21 may purchase those items for minors which will allows them to always be able to have them in their possession‚ knowing that it’s against the law or with an underage individual having a fake identical ID. When learning how to resolve ethical dilemmas‚ being able to communicate rationally for the reason of believing one decision seems right and another seems wrong is vital. My response to this scenario would be to
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I’ve encountered an ethical dilemma situation in my recent capstone clinical. My clinical preceptor and I caught in the concepts of the principles of autonomy‚ veracity‚ and nonmalifecence. This occurred when we provided nursing service to a 30-years-old male patient who was taken to the ED as a post-code patient. The EMS team arrived in the scene and initiated CPR and defibrillated a client (on the floor of his room). The client ended up in the ICU with a diagnosis of hypoxic- anoxic injury (HAI)
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At some point in everyone’s life they have probably heard an argument or a commercial about the ethical dilemma of abortion. Since the historical 1973 Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade‚ the discussion of a woman’s right to have an abortion has been one of the most contentious moral and political debates in America. The Court decided that a woman’s right to an abortion fell within the right to privacy‚ protected by the fourteenth amendment. The decision gave a woman total freedom and control
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Ethical dilemmas in interpreting: case study 2 In the scenario‚ I am interpreting at a medical practice. The Service Provider (SP) is the GP practice and Service User (SU) is a patient. I arrive at the reception on time‚ the receptionist waves me in direction of the patient and then she answers a phone call. Then the patient is called into the consultation room. At the consultation room‚ I try to introduce myself and give my Code of Practice (CoP) to the doctor but he ignores me and asks what
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Ethical dilemma is an issue involving moral principles with no right or wrong. There will always have debates on whether one matter is considered being right or to some people’s perspective‚ it might be wrong. Take for example in Singapore‚ many people will be against the idea of abortion as it is the same as murder. However‚ there are also some who are not against the idea. In fact‚ abortions were considered legal so long the pregnancy does not exceed 6 months. It actually depends on one’s conscience
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