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Related Concept Videos

Ethical Issues01:27

Ethical Issues

2.4K
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:
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Ethical Dilemmas I01:17

Ethical Dilemmas I

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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...
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Ethical Standards I01:25

Ethical Standards I

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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,...
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Ethical Dilemmas II01:30

Ethical Dilemmas II

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Resolving an ethical dilemma in healthcare involves a systematic approach that considers every aspect of the issue, respecting both the patient's needs and values and the healthcare professional's ethical obligations. Here are potential steps to resolve an ethical dilemma:
2.7K
Professional Values01:29

Professional Values

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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...
11.2K
Egoism and Altruism01:55

Egoism and Altruism

93.6K
Voluntary behavior with the intent to help other people is called prosocial behavior. Why do people help other people? Is personal benefit such as feeling good about oneself the only reason people help one another?
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Mar 9, 2026

Qualitative and Quantitative Validation of Tools with Rating Scales Aimed at Assessing the Quality of University Service-Learning
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Published on: August 29, 2025

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Should Social Value Obligations be Local or Global?

Rahul Nayak, Seema K Shah

    Bioethics
    |January 7, 2017
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Research ethics require products to be accessible. This study argues for extending social value obligations to include the global poor, not just local communities, for greater research beneficence.

    Keywords:
    global healthglobal justiceinternational research ethicsreasonable availabilitysocial value

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    The Social Dimension of Stress: Experimental Manipulations of Social Support and Social Identity in the Trier Social Stress Test
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    Area of Science:

    • Bioethics
    • Global Health Equity
    • Research Ethics

    Background:

    • Current bioethics guidelines mandate reasonable availability of research products to participants and communities.
    • The concept of "social value" in research has been geographically limited, often excluding the global poor.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To propose a revised conception of social value obligations in research.
    • To advocate for extending these obligations to encompass the global poor.

    Main Methods:

    • Conceptual analysis of existing bioethics frameworks.
    • Argumentation based on principles of global beneficence and institutional commitments.

    Main Results:

    • The current geographically constrained view of social value neglects the global poor.
    • Global beneficence and institutional pledges support wider accessibility of research products.

    Conclusions:

    • A broader understanding of social value obligations is necessary in research ethics.
    • Researchers and sponsors have ethical duties to ensure research products benefit the global poor.
    • Further research is needed to operationalize these expanded obligations.