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Ethical Issues01:27

Ethical Issues

Nurses are essential in patient care, upholding the ethical principles of their profession and effectively navigating ethical dilemmas. Neglecting ethical issues can lead to inadequate patient care, compromised therapeutic relationships, and moral distress among healthcare workers.
Ethical Concerns in Healthcare:
Ethical Dilemmas I01:17

Ethical Dilemmas I

Ethical dilemmas in nursing are of utmost importance, as they often arise from the tension between adhering to core ethical principles and the practical realities of healthcare delivery. These dilemmas require nurses to navigate complex situations where competing ethical considerations pull them in different directions.
Let us explore some examples to understand the potentially complex moral decisions nurses face.
Take the case of caring for minors, particularly in areas related to reproductive...
Nursing Code of Ethics01:29

Nursing Code of Ethics

The Nursing Code of Ethics sets the ethical benchmark for the profession, and guides nurses in ethical analysis and decision making at the societal, organizational, and clinical levels. The code encompasses showing compassion and respect for the patient, their families, and communities in all circumstances while committing to providing patient-centered care. In addition, the code states that nurses must advocate for the patient by defending a cause or recommendation to protect their rights,...
Nursing Ethical Principles I01:22

Nursing Ethical Principles I

Ethical principles serve as the moral compass in the longstanding tradition of nursing, guiding healthcare professionals in their interactions with patients and families. These principles, namely autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, and fidelity, provide a robust framework for navigating the ethical complexities of daily nursing practice.
Autonomy
Autonomy underscores the significance of a patient's self-determination and freedom from external control. In healthcare, respecting the...
Ethical Standards I01:25

Ethical Standards I

The American Nurses Association (ANA) created and implemented the first nationally accepted Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements. The Code of Ethics is a living document regularly updated by the ANA and establishes an ethical standard that is non-negotiable for nurses in all roles and settings.
The Code of Ethics provisions outline the nurse's duty to the patient, the healthcare team, the profession, and society. The Code's fundamental principles include advocacy,...
Nursing Ethical Principles II01:27

Nursing Ethical Principles II

Ethical principles are essential in guiding nurses to fulfill their responsibilities, focusing on the quality of nursing care and decision-making. These principles, including autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice, and fidelity, shape the ethical framework within healthcare settings.
Consider the following scenario, which illustrates how these principles are applied in the care of Mr. John, a fifty-year-old teacher diagnosed with metastatic liver cancer.
Initially, Mr. John's cancer...

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Religion, bioethics and nursing practice.

Marsha D Fowler1

  • 1Azusa Pacific University, Azusa, CA 91702, USA. mfowler@apu.edu

Nursing Ethics
|June 17, 2009
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Nurses must study religions to provide whole-person care and advance bioethics. Understanding diverse religious ethical systems offers unique insights for healthcare decision-making and practice.

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Bioethics
  • Nursing
  • Religious Studies

Background:

  • Whole-person care requires understanding patients' religious beliefs.
  • Bioethics decision-making is incomplete without considering religious-ethical systems.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To advocate for nursing engagement with religious studies.
  • To highlight the contribution of religious diversity to bioethics.

Main Methods:

  • Identifies six considerations in religious studies.
  • Examines how religious faith is expressed.
  • Draws an example from Native American religions' views on speech.

Main Results:

  • Religious traditions offer distinct ethical perspectives.
  • Cultural interactions shape religious subtraditions' ethical contributions.
  • Understanding religion provides novel bioethical insights.

Conclusions:

  • Rigorous study of religious-ethical systems is essential for nursing.
  • Bioethics benefits from the diverse insights of world religions.
  • Interdisciplinary study enhances holistic patient care and ethical practice.