Which ethical principle do you think is most important and why? The ethical principle in which I think is most important is autonomy. “The term autonomy denotes having the freedom to make choices about issues that affect one's life” (Burkhardt & Nathaniel, 2008, p. 54). Patients should be able to make the decisions regarding their health. As health care professional, we are responsible for educating the patient on certain things in which can improve their health. After the patient has been educated, this would allow and encourage the patient to become involve in the planning of their health. If the patient is involved with their care planning the patient would be more likely to be compliant with the recommended treatment. In the end, this
In health and social care sector, health care professionals take into account four key ethical principles when providing service to the service users. The key ethical principles are justice, autonomy, beneficence and non-maleficence. In health and social care settings people must be treated fairly without being judgemental regardless of who they are or where they come from. Health care professionals must allow their service users choose the type of services or treatment they want and the professional should support them in getting quality care that will benefit their service users. Also, health care professional must not
trying ethical patient care issues were reported to be “protecting patients’ rights; autonomy and informed consent to treatment; staffing patterns; advanced care planning; and surrogate decision-making”. (Ulrich et al.
The ethical principles involved in the care of this patient include beneficence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, and paternalism.
The third defining principle of medical ethics is to “do no harm.” This means that even though a treatment may advance the health of a patient and
Following the appropriate ethics is of extreme importance in the nursing profession. “Ethics are of universal concern and crucial in all professional healthcare” (Gustafsson & Stenberg, 2017, p.420). The leading goal in nursing is to achieve patient-centered care. According to Arnold and Boggs (2016), “Patient centered care focuses on fully partnering with the client to provide care that incorporates his or her values and preferences to give safe, caring, compassionate and effective care” (p.25). In order to provide a well-grounded, caring environment, nurses need to be able to balance their personal differences with the ethical care standards they are obligated to provide patients (Gustafsson & Stenberg, 2017). Nurses spend the most time with patients; therefore, they eventually will develop a “sense of rightness” (Gustfasson & Stenberg, 2017, p.420).
You bring up a very good point regarding health care ethics, which maintains that providers advocate for the best care of their patient. Informed consent requires that healthcare workers provide patients with “reasonable” information on their options for treatment (DeBord, 2014). Healthcare workers who intentionally withhold information about a relevant treatment option or who minimize risks and exaggerate the benefits of a procedure to a patient are engaging unethical behavior. I believe physicians must strive to provide informed consent to patient so as to have the patient be an active participant in their care. Author Kass, believes that medical ethics must respect patient autonomy, and I agree (Kass, 2001). Informed consent and autonomy
Ethical consideration is very important in concern to policy making. Ethics guides and shape the new health policies and existing policies by correcting ethical issues and developing the possible solutions. Because policy market fully depending on the human control, if any issue come related to ethics of individual then it’s very hard for survive of any policy. In concern to ethics policymaking should be guided by the 4 philosophical principles- they are respect for the anatomy of other individual, justice, beneficence, and nonmaleficence (No
There are ethical principles that all health care providers, especially nurses, should abide by not only for the patient’s safety, health promotion, and satisfaction, but for a peace of mind, knowing that the best possible quality of care was provided. Within this paper, two major ethical principles will be discussed in detail. This includes respect for autonomy and nonmalefience.
2. An ethical decision-making principle that came into play in my clinical experience involved a competent patient refusing a blood transfusion because he was Jehovah Witness. This patient was actually a physician himself and the ethical dilemma it raised was that it conflicted with my nurse and I’s commitment to provide beneficial care while avoiding harm. While we could advise our patients our own views on why they should receive this blood transfusion we had to make sure we avoided coercion, and deception that could deny our patients autonomy. Out patient ended up changing their mind and agreeing to the blood transfusion, but we still had to make sure the change wasn 't a consequence of illness impairing the patient to decide and that the patient was basing their decision on facts. The ANA code of ethics states the right to self-determination. Self-determination is also called autonomy and forms the basis for informed consent within the health care system. The patient has the right to make his healthcare decision. Knowing this had an impact because ultimately a signed blood refusal card is equally and ethically equivalent as a component patient with an advance directive. Knowing this I had to treat the patient according to his wishes.
List and describe the six ethical principles discussed in your text. There are six ethical principles discussed in the text and they are used to guide decision making. They are the Golden Rule, Immanuel Kant's Categorical Imperative, Descartes' rule of change, Utilitarian Principle, Risk Aversion Principle, and ethical "no free lunch" rule. These principles, used to judge conduct, existed independently in many different cultures and religions, and have endured the test of time because they were present throughout our history.
There are four main ideas for ethical reasoning. All differ and have important features individually. The first is utilitarian, the second Kantian, the third Aristotelian and finally feminist. Looking at these all separately by what they stand for will show the differences and most important pieces of these four reasoning’s.
Moral principles are the rules that govern which actions are right and which are wrong. A moral can be for all of society or an individual’s beliefs. Sometimes a moral can be gleaned from a story or experience. There are many common moral beliefs in American society. I would like to just name a few such as, be honest, do not cheat, treat others as you would want to be treated, do not judge, tell the truth, be respectful to yourself, have humility, be generous, serve mankind be loyal, keep your self control, respect others, be loyal, have courage, be trustworthy, be forgiving, have integrity, keep your promises, and be of tolerant differences.
The importance of an ethical basis for medical practice has been emphasized in recent years. Several groups and countries have called for a broadly embraced, basic curriculum in ethics for students in the medical profession (Lakhan, Hamlat, & McNamee, Laird, 2009). The United States has no standardized curriculum in medical ethics, but ethics courses are now common in medical schools (Lakhan, Hamlat, & McNamee, Laird, 2009). Professional groups, hospitals, and certifying or accrediting boards such as the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Health Care Organizations have emphasized the importance of ethical principles through their mission statements and procedures (Stirrat, Johnston, Gillon, Boyd, 2010).
Ethical standards are created to address ethical issues in practice and to provide guidelines for determining what ethically acceptable or unacceptable behavior is.
I did not live up to my own standard of ethics about six months ago when I hit a car in the Starbucks parking lot and drove away. I was backing into a spot when my right side-mirror hit the adjacent car’s brake light, which subsequently cracked. The car appeared to be an early 90s model Toyota Camry with many dents in the doors, rusted paint, and a duct taped bumper. I looked around to see if anyone was looking, saw no one, and then drove away.