Related Concept Videos
Professional Values
11.2K
Nurses are responsible for caring for patients during birth, death, illness, and healing. Professional values guide the decisions and actions that nurses make in their careers. If nurses know the decisions and actions to take, providing patients with exceptional care is possible.
The values that are the foundation of the nursing profession are altruism, autonomy, human dignity, and social justice.
First, altruism refers to the concern for the welfare and well-being of others without personal...
The values that are the foundation of the nursing profession are altruism, autonomy, human dignity, and social justice.
First, altruism refers to the concern for the welfare and well-being of others without personal...
11.2K
Humanistic Psychology
3.1K
Humanistic psychology emerged in the mid-20th century as a response to the deterministic and pessimistic nature of behaviorism and psychoanalysis. While behaviorism focused on observable behaviors influenced by the environment and psychoanalysis delved into unconscious motivations, both theories suggested that human actions lacked free will. In contrast, humanistic psychology offers a perspective that emphasizes the innate potential for goodness and growth within every individual.
This approach...
This approach...
3.1K
Ethics and Bioethics
3.4K
Ethics is a philosophical study of moral actions. Ethics attempts to determine what is valuable for individuals and society. It examines the rational justification of moral judgments and analyzes what is morally just, fair, and right. Bioethics is a sub-discipline of applied ethics that analyzes the philosophical, social, and legal issues in life sciences and medicine. Ethical theories serve as a foundation for decision-making and represent the viewpoints from which people seek direction. They...
3.4K
Nursing Ethical Principles I
4.6K
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...
Autonomy
Autonomy underscores the significance of a patient's self-determination and freedom from external control. In healthcare, respecting...
4.6K
The Professional Nurse
7.1K
Professional nurses are not limited to bedside care and are taking roles of greater responsibility. A nurse should have a knowledge-based practice, including personal, theoretical, procedural, cultural, and reflexive knowledge. Additionally, nurses must be competent in cognitive, technical, interpersonal, and ethical/legal skills. Some of the best attributes of successful nurses include the following:
Communication skills: These are critical characteristics, especially speaking and listening.
Communication skills: These are critical characteristics, especially speaking and listening.
7.1K
Ethical Dilemmas I
2.3K
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...
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...
2.3K
You might also read
Related Articles
Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.
Sort by
Same author
Grounding the Dyad in Patient and Caregiver Capabilities.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same author
Goals- and Burdens-based DMC as Expressions of Value Rather than Manifestations of DMC.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2022
Same author
Conceptual Compatibility and Transparency in Capacity Assessments.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2022
Same author
Ontology: A Bridge between Bioethics and Data-Driven Inquiry.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2021
Same author
Ambiguous Interests: Maternal Desires and Fetal Interests.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2016
Same journal
Defending the Ethical Permissibility of Laryngeal Transplantation.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same journal
A Framework of Institutional Obligations for Pragmatic Clinical Trials.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same journal
Should Adherence to Medical Recommendations Be a Requirement for Kidney Transplant Candidacy?
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same journal
How "America First" Abandoned Global Health: The Case for an African Model.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same journal
Carrots and Sticks: Incentives in Shaping Digital Health Products.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Same journal
From Empowerment to Offloading: Task Shifting and the Redistribution of Responsibility in Digital Health.
The American journal of bioethics : AJOB·2026
Related Experiment Video
Updated: Mar 18, 2026

14:32
Using Visual and Narrative Methods to Achieve Fair Process in Clinical Care
Published on: February 16, 2011
25.0K
Analysis From a Fourth Perspective: Professionalism
1a SUNY Buffalo.
The American Journal of Bioethics : AJOB
|July 2, 2016
Summary
No abstract available in PubMed .

