Introduction The purpose of this assignment is to illustrate the ability in a nursing context, to take information given on an assigned Case study scenario and carry out a complete documentation are plan for the patient, on her specific problems that is an issue at the present time.. For the plan of care, I will look more in-depth at the scenario and case study provided for Mrs Greta Balodis, focusing on Day One post op care as requested for the documentation provided by the course co-ordinator. Assessing relevant care of Greta, with a view to the information from the case study. Using a full and complete care plan, the information will present in more detail, the SMART mode is applicable to show two long term and two short-term key goals and the rationale of the goals. Included, as an appendix is the documented care plan for the patient. Legal and ethical considerations pertinent for the case study and the rationale of why with detailed information and supporting referenced material is included for legal and ethical considerations, this will be to ensure that a understanding of the legal and ethical issues surrounding Greta Balodis are present. A list of the Inter-professional team that would be included in the treatment of the patient , rationales behind, why each is included and a detailed look at one of the professionals. The conclusion illustrates learnt information that contributes to a nursing student’s educational learning from the assignment and an overview and
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.
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.
This case is purely about the legal and ethical implications of nurse T.C and her nursing manager of telemetry unit, nurse F.J. This nurse T.C has worked in a highly stressful environment before but her behavior has only recently deteriorated and become emotional with the occasional outbursts and uncontrollable crying. Her behavior put the legal issue of non-maleficence at risk for her patients as it would cause emotional stress on them. However, the legal issue that really matters is her case is that of defamation of her character as well as disclosure of her private and confidential mental state information by F.J to other nurse managers not in the unit she worked and to even the subordinates.
Throughout the course of their career, nurses will constantly face the reality of death and dying patients. Disparate from medical physicians, nurses are almost always on duty to treat and hand out medication. Therefore, a situation where it is not possible for their patient to completely heal can ultimately put the nurse in a high amount of stress. Such feelings can lead to discomfort with aiding hospice patients and a decrease in nurses in that area (Peters, et al., 2013). The quality of end of life health care is also jeopardized due to the nurse facing ethical issues and death anxiety (Hold, 2017, p. 13). The impact of a patient death can incite more stress in the health care worker, according to Bickham, "Nurses often experience
Autonomy is the concept of making a rational decision that is informed and un-coerced. Respect for autonomy is whereby the patient is allowed to act in any way they would like. It means that the patient has the capacity to act in their own intention with their own understanding and without the control of any influences that would prevent them from taking a voluntary and free action ADDIN EN.CITE Hickman20081382(Hickman, Cartwright, & Young, 2008)1382138217Hickman, Susan E.Cartwright, Juliana C.Young, Heather M.Administrators' Perspectives on Ethical Issues in Long-Term Care ResearchJournal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics: An International JournalJournal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics: An International Journal69-78312008University of California Press15562646http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/jer.2008.3.1.69( HYPERLINK l "_ENREF_5" o "Hickman, 2008 #1382" Hickman, Cartwright, & Young, 2008). Its corresponding virtue is that of being respectful ADDIN EN.CITE Beauchamp20091384(Beauchamp & Childress, 2009)138413846Beauchamp, T.L.Childress, J.F.Principles of Biomedical Ethics2009New York, NYOxford University Press9780195143317http://books.google.com/books?id=_14H7MOw1o4C( HYPERLINK l "_ENREF_1" o "Beauchamp, 2009 #1384" Beauchamp & Childress, 2009).
Describe the ethical dilemma that the nurse is facing? Please be specific. What makes it an ethical dilemma?
Ethical, Bioethical, and Legal Issues in Nursing Chio Thung Arizona State University Ethical, Bioethical, and Legal Issues in Nursing Ethical, bioethical, and legal issues are all concerns that affect professional nursing practice. Nurses should be aware about why and how these issues affect their profession. A case scenario that questions these boundaries is a homeless person without any health care insurance being provided substandard care by a medical team (Maville & Huerta, 2008). There are many components that affect nursing such as ethical principles, bioethical dilemmas, moral values, and statutes, which I will discuss how they would influence my actions in this case scenario.
Time, cost, and efficiency. Those three barriers are the challenges within Bellin’s current refill team covering six clinics. Beginning with medications not being filled at office visits. Patient’s changing pharmacy’s. Refills remain that the pharmacy and patients reading their medication bottles that state Refills remaining:0 and that is only due to the last older script being pulled from the pharmacy file. A new script has been often sent in but doesn’t register when a patient picks up a new script bringing the patient to call the clinic for a refill. When really a new script is on hand at the pharmacy already. So, then I research and verify with the pharmacy. Then there is the common scenario of the patient calling the clinic requesting
For many healthcare provider’s and registered nurses, ethical decision-making invokes the concept of ethical dilemmas (Guido, 2014). When healthcare providers and registered nurses establish a trusting relationship with their patients these caretakers can sometimes experience a variety of ethical dilemmas throughout their healthcare careers. However, caring for a patient's one’s personal belief can sometime intertwine with patients personal and ethical beliefs. When making ethical decisions, nurses need to combine all the elements using an orderly, systematic, and objective approach (Guido, 2014). Registered nurses have a moral and ethical obligation to ensure patient safety regardless of their personal beliefs (Inoue, Karima & Harada, 2017).
Ethical issues in nursing will always be an ongoing learning process. Nurses are taught in nursing school what should be done and how. Scenarios are given on tests with one right answer. However, there are situations that nurses may encounter that may have multiple answers and it is hard to choose one. “Ethical directives are not always clearly evident and people sometimes disagree about what is right and wrong” (Butts & Rich, 2016). When an ethical decision is made by a nurse, there must be a logical justification and not just emotions.
Ethical and legal dilemmas are issues that nurses face in their professional careers. Nurses are accountable for safe and appropriate administration of medication. With the growth in malpractice lawsuits it is important that nurses take certain precautions to limit the risk of lawsuits. “Nurses can limit the risk of liability through maintaining open communication with patients, expertise in practice, attention to details, and autonomy. (Burkhart &Nathanial, 2013).
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,
An ethical problem is not a routine decision with a predictable outcome. It is the opposite. Ethical problems may include differences in opinion, power struggles, and even intuition (Burkhardt & Nathaniel, 2014). The ethical problem from the case study is the struggle the nurse, Joanna, has with her peers to determine the cause of abdominal pain in her patient and the deadly outcome of her intuition. The dilemma Joanna faced was a frequent COPD patient, Mrs. Kelly, who began to complain of abdominal pain.
I enjoyed your thoughtful post. As I pondered your ending question, it seems unfair to drain the healthcare system of money and resources for a person who refuses to take care of their own health. This is where ethical dilemmas become a reality. As nurses, we have all cared for that patient. They refuse to follow the doctor’s orders and return to the hospital unit time and time again with the same issue, as before, but each time it gets just a little worse. They are laying in the hospital bed barely able to catch their breath and state, “This time, I’m going to quit smoking. You won’t see me here again.” But sure enough, they once again return with an exacerbation of their symptoms and the care starts all over again. As a nurse, it is easy
In this case, the nurse who was supervising the hospital used her best judgment in maintaining the care for the ICU. All hospitals are licensed to provide appropriate nursing and medical care to a specific number of patients, with the understanding that a hospital will only admit those patients it has the resources, staff, equipment, and facilities needed to deliver said care. This license also directs hospitals and nursing staff to engage in practices which are unmistakably dangerous, irresponsible and unethical, and in many ways, are in direct violation of state and federal laws, HIPAA and JCAHO requirements, and the Department’s own regulations. Closing the unit by Dr. Bestknabe is not a solution; rather, it creates more