Nurses are advocates for the community, they help and support the people live healthy lives. Nurses peruse their actions by using their knowledge and skills gained from previous years to current times. Overall, nurses experience difference ethical beliefs, their own perception of care, a variety of goals and strategies, and personal declaration.
Ethical Beliefs
As a Christian, I believe that perusing my career as a nurse was a calling from God. Everyone has a purpose in this world and God is the one who helps you find it. The healthcare setting is a place where people are hurting, emotionally and physically. People are desperate for help and usually go to God for help (Harris & Harris, 2009). That is why as a nurse it is important to have ethical beliefs. Sometimes treatment including surgeries or drugs are not the only way to heal, but a positive mind and prayer are. I believe that God works through nurses and gives them the power and strength they need to accomplish their goals in healing and supporting their ill patients. As an ethical nurse, I have to be open and understanding to other culture and religion as well to make sure my patients and
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This is a good goal because it ensures that I am on track to passing the semester without having stress or worrying. If I have a good GPA I have a better chance of getting into the residency program which increases my chance of getting a job right when I graduate and maybe even gaining experience so I can become a NICU nurse as soon as possible. Becoming a NICU or a pediatric nurse is one of my main goals, but who knows if it will change in the future. I know I will succeed and complete my goals if I stay focused and find good ways to study. I would have to start studying for the NCLEX during school, that way right when I graduate I could take it and continue my dream as a
As a registered nurse practicing in the state of California I am responsible for practicing within my states legal regulations and nursing scope of practice. My concern for the welfare of the sick and injured allows me to practice ethical provisions of nursing. These are required if I am to carry out competent and effective nursing care. Nursing encompasses the prevention of illness, the alleviation of suffering, and the protection, promotion, and restoration of health in the care of individuals. Therefore, as health care professionals we must be familiar with the different philosophical forces, ethical principles, theories and values that influence nursing. At the same time, we must be respectful to our patient’s
between two sets of human values, both of which are judged to be “good” but neither of
Ethical issues have always affected the role of the professional nurse. Efforts to enact this standard may cause conflict in health care settings in which the traditional roles of the nurse are delineated within a bureaucratic structure. Nurses have more direct contact with patients than one can even imagine, which plays a huge role in protecting the patients’ rights, and creating ethical issues for the nurses caring for the various patients they are assigned to. In this paper I will discuss some of the ethical and legal issues that nurses are faced with each and every day.
This essay will consider ethics in nursing, discuss values and morals and how dignity and respect in patient care is influenced; considering the importance of reflection and the implications it has on effective practice from the perspective of a student nurse. The scenario “Call Me Joe” provided by Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) (2010a) highlights concerning issues and bad practice that are happening in modern day nursing practice, and using the Driscoll and Teh (2001) reflective model: What, Now What and So What, to consider the care that Joe is receiving; considering how the nursing practice affects him directly and the implications of the nature of knowledge in nursing practice. Part of the way in which nursing practice is
In conclusion, I feel that the philosophy of nursing is a combination of core values, and beliefs that teaches us to treat each human being with the respect, compassion, dignity, and uniqueness, regardless of disease, social or economic status, or race that they deserve. My focus with each patient will be to allow them to have the right to be involved in the decision making of their care as well as allowing their family members to be involved in the decision making. I will maintain my beliefs and values by treating every patient, or coworker with respect that they deserve. I believe that each person has a calling in life and it takes a special person to become a nurse.
Cost of the end of life medical care is too expensive to continue at the rate it is going. The fiscal year 2016 saw 672.1 billion dollars spent on Medicare participants with just 5% using 49% of those monies ("NHE Fact Sheet," n.d., p. 1). The ANA provides a code of ethics that nurses should use to help guide them in clinical practice decision making. There are four fundamental responsibilities for nurses to adhere too they are: promote health, prevent illness, restore health and alleviate suffering. Ethical Principals for nurses are; respect & autonomy, beneficence, justice, veracity, and fidelity ("Code of Ethics for Nurses," 2012). Attempting to keep ethical responsibilities and principals in mind, while conducting a cost-benefit analysis to determine resource allocation for an aging population and end of life care causes many ethical dilemmas.
Nurses face ethical decisions frequently when giving patient care. These dilemmas can result from deciding how to allocate resources such as time or materials. Caring for patients from diverse backgrounds complicates decision-making when faced with dilemmas, because organizations that depend on standards of patient care that may not by culturally congruent. In these situations, the nurse must consider the patient’s beliefs and values along with the organization’s care expectations and bridge the gap between the two (Andrews and Boyle, 2016-a). In this post, I will describe ethical dilemmas with the current state of population health and health disparities, discuss the pros and cons of the Affordable Care Act, and explain how social justice
There are five principles to ethical nursing. The first principle, nonmaleficence, or do no harm, it is directly tied to a nurse's duty to protect the patient's safety. This principle dictates that we do not cause injury to our patients. A way that harm can occur to patients is through communication failures. These failures can be intentional or as a result of electronic or human error. Failing to convey accurate information, giving wrong messages, and breaking down of equipment, can cause harm to patients. Some of these communication problems may certainly occur whether a patient is at a neighborhood clinic or 500 miles away, but distance and high reliance on electronic technology make close examination of communication and ethical
The aim of this essay is to discuss an ethical issue encountered whilst on placement. The discussion will focus on the influence of the key ethics theories of deontology and utilitarianism, ethics principles of autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice on decision-making in practice. It will consider the patients’ and staffs’ values and beliefs, legislation and professional practice. Confidentiality will be respected by using a pseudonym, Carol, in accordance with the Nursing and Midwifery Council [NMC] (2008) guidelines on confidentiality.
Nurses are responsible for being ethical, competent, safe, and stay consistent with local, state, and federal laws. They must have an understanding of how to apply these principles when providing care to a client, they are not only responsible for understanding but also protecting client’s rights. Clients who are in a mental health setting have legal rights and they are guaranteed the same rights as any other person. These rights include, the right to humane treatment and care, the right to vote, the rights related to granting, forfeiture, or denial of a driver’s license, the right to press legal charges against another person, they have the right to refuse treatment, a right to confidentiality,
In my opinion, nursing is a well-educated profession not only to prevent and protect the public from illness and injury, but to facilitate the curing or alleviating their suffering from illness by patient centered holistic caring. Nurses are the main work force in the health care system, they are working in hospitals, nursing homes, community care sites, and other health care settings. As a nurse, I must respect and listen to the patients as individuals. I need to provide nonjudgemental care to those in need regardless of their social classes, religious beliefs, financial and cultural differences. I must consider the patient’s background, assessments, personal values and beliefs as a whole to achieve this goal. I strive to be an health advocate
Aldo Leopold said “Ethical behavior is doing the right thing when no one else is watching even when doing the wrong thing is legal”. As healthcare providers, our patients place a great deal of trust in us to practice ethical medicine (Battie, 2015, p. 505). We, as nurses, have access to intimate parts of patient’s lives, and are looked upon to help educate patients in their decisions towards appropriate healthcare. Guided by a code of ethics, nurses serve to protect, prevent and avoid ethical harm to patients, while having the responsibility to strive for better preventative healthcare as opposed to illness centered care (Kangasniemi, Pakkanen, & Korhonen,
The ethical dilemma is a situation by which it’s difficult to determine whether a situation is can be handled without disappointing both sides. Therefore, an ethical dilemma exists when the right thing to do is clear or when members of the healthcare team cannot agree on the right thing to do. Ethical dilemmas require negotiation of different points of view (potter, Perry, Stockert, & Hall 2011pg 78).
- Making choices that are best for the individual or society at certain times and in particular situations and then evaluating such choices and outcomes.
Nursing embraces the protection, promotion, and restoration of health and well-being. Those who become nurses are expected to obey the values, moral norms, and ideals of the profession, as well as encompass them as part of what it means to be a nurse (American Nurses Association, vii). In providing care beyond the physical realm of healing, illness can be viewed in a different perspective. Illness can rather be viewed as an enablement, allowing one to grow both spiritually and emotionally. It can also empower, as it can act as a summons to selflessness (Pellegrino & Thomasma, 14). Nurses are expected to consider these views in their daily work, and are expected to hold core ethical values in their profession that guide the decisions they make in the care they provide. Some examples of ethical principles in nursing that I believe to be of most importance include: respect for human dignity, autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, fidelity, caring, integrity, diversity, and excellence.