University: NRS437V-O103 Ethical Decision Making in Healthcare June 15‚ 2014 Professional Moral Compass A moral compass is defined as: “anything which serves to guide a person’s decisions based on morals or virtues” (moral compass‚ n.d.). In this paper‚ the writer will examine what defines her nursing moral compass by taking the reader through her personal nursing ethic‚ how her personal‚ cultural and spiritual values have influenced her and what moral and ethical dilemmas she has
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Ethical Lens Inventory Summary My personal ethic lens is Rights and Responsibility and relationship. I believe that this is true because I have always considered myself to be a very rational and fair person when it comes to making decisions in my life. When it comes to completing a task I find myself thinking through every way I can accomplish the task at hand before actually doing it. I am also this way when it comes to personal decisions as in what career I want and what I have to do to obtain
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Applying Ethical Frameworks in Nursing Practice Disclosing patient information to a third party‚ without a patient’s consent or a court order is considered a breach of confidentiality. Legal liability for a breach of confidentiality covers a broader spectrum than ethical guidelines‚ which lend to doing what is morally right. Confidentiality in nursing comes with an ethical need for creating rapport with patients. Trust established facilitates increased communication and comfort
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------------------------------------------------- MidAmerica Nazarene University ------------------------------------------------- School of Nursing and Health Science ------------------------------------------------- RN-BSN Program ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- NURS 4703: Nursing Research/Informatics ------------------------------------------------- Take-home Quiz #1 – Due January 23‚ 8:00 am -------------------------------------------------
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Summary Sheet • Malpractice and negligence both concern actions that are results of omission and acting in way that causes injury to patient. Malpractice concerns professional. • Tart is a civil wrong made against a person or property. • Elements of malpractice: duty owed to patient‚ breach of the duty‚ foreseeability‚ causation‚ injury‚ damage. • Nurse Managers are responsible for ensuring that standards of care are current in policy and that nursing staff follow the standards. • Issues
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Ethical and Legal Issues in Nursing Sherry Cox‚ Talia Mukhlis‚ Siobhan Wilson NUR/391 February 23‚ 2015 Lisa Alexander Ethical and Legal Issues in Nursing Ethics and societal values are part of what makes each individual unique. We all form our opinions based on what we believe in our hearts to be the right way to act and think. As nurses‚ sometimes these personal values correlate with our professional beliefs‚ and sometimes they may not. There are times that we may have religious or philosophical
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the controversy around the leakage of questions in the recent nursing licensing examinations. Wouldn’t a retake be better for all of the batch 2006 examinees‚ to remove the cloud of doubt around their competence? But wouldn’t a retake mean more expenses‚ some families selling‚ literally‚ the last carabao? And after all’s said and done‚ who should be punished for the leakage? My sense is that we’re having difficulties with these ethical issues because "ethics" is complicated. Moreover‚ ethics hasn’t
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with respect to self-determination‚ is the patient who arrives via emergency medical services (EMS) in extremis who is a no code and objects to extraordinary measures‚ however‚ the family desires intervention. Emergency nurses retain a legal and ethical obligation to affirm the patient’s autonomy regarding the decision for no resuscitation and allowance of a natural death (Emergency Nurses Association‚ 2014). There is excellent support in our ED when encountering the difficult situation of patient
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the subsequent theories that have evolved from it is paramount to the profession of nursing. These theories assist nurses with identifying potential problems and developing skills required to determine and justify decisions in given situations. Furthermore‚ they work to enhance and shape an individual’s ethical beliefs and values. There are a number of ethical theories that have been introduced throughout nursing including the widely agreed upon four; deontology‚ utilitarianism‚ virtue ethics and
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Ethical Theory Summary This is an outline and summary of three of the most prominent ethical theories in the history of philosophy. (Note that all three of these represent different ethical absolutist/universalist theories. A view known as ethical relativism follows these.) Please take this as a sketch that invites you to investigate these ethical theories further. After each brief sketch‚ I will provide some web links that will be helpful to read. Virtue Ethics (especially Aristotle)
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