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[Using restraint during treatment: Definitions, contexts and benchmarks].

Bénédicte Lombart1

  • 1Hôpital Saint-Antoine, AP-HP, GH Sorbonne université, 84 rue du Faubourg Saint-Antoine, 75012 Paris, France; Laboratoire interdisciplinaire d'études du politique Hannah-Arendt, UR 7373, Université Paris-Est Créteil, 61 avenue du Général-de-Gaulle 94010 Créteil cedex, France.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Nurses sometimes physically restrain patients during medical procedures. This practice raises complex ethical, legal, and professional questions for healthcare providers, particularly nurses, who often face these dilemmas alone.

Keywords:
contentiondilemmadilemmeethicsinfirmiernurseproceduresprocéduresrestraintéthique

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Area of Science:

  • Nursing Practice
  • Medical Ethics
  • Patient Care

Context:

  • Physical restraint is sometimes employed in nursing during therapeutic or diagnostic procedures.
  • This practice prompts numerous professional, institutional, philosophical, ethical, legal, and deontological inquiries.
  • Nurses play a significant role in decisions involving coercive care measures.

Purpose:

  • To explore the multifaceted questions arising from the use of physical restraint in clinical nursing.
  • To examine the ethical, legal, and professional dimensions of patient restraint during medical treatments.
  • To highlight the nurse's pivotal role and individual moral burdens in coercive care decisions.

Summary:

  • The use of physical restraint in nursing care, while sometimes necessary for procedures, generates significant ethical and professional challenges.
  • Nurses are central to decisions about using coercion for patient care, often confronting profound moral dilemmas independently.
  • The implications span professional conduct, institutional policy, philosophical viewpoints, ethical considerations, legal frameworks, and deontological duties.

Impact:

  • This analysis underscores the need for clear guidelines and support systems for nurses navigating the complexities of patient restraint.
  • It calls for a deeper understanding of the ethical and legal ramifications of coercive nursing practices.
  • Promoting ethical decision-making and professional accountability in situations requiring patient restraint is crucial for quality healthcare.