Chapter 3: Values, Ethics, and Legal Issues
A nurse who views conflict as positive might find ______
Are use of respect, communication, collaborative care, equilibrium, Harmony, service, and creativity enhanced
What are often linked with values but are not the same as values
Attitudes beliefs and behaviors
What is a value system
A learned set of principles and rules
What is value inquiry
A method of examining social issues that value that motivate human choices
What do you living wills often include
A proxy directive
What are behaviors?
Actions that can be perceived or noticed
What is confidentiality
All information regarding a patient's condition including types of tests ordered or results is confidential
What are institutional policies
Guidelines developed by organizations or agencies to direct professional practice
Institution teach faith principles deemed important for?
Decision making in daily life
What does nonmaleficence mean?
Do you avoid doing harm, to remove from home, to prevent from harm
What does beneficence mean?
Doing good are promoting good to help others
How does a nurse protect the patients privacy
Ensuring that the patient's body is properly covered
What do sports interaction provide
Essential opportunity for peer value sharing and interaction
What are different ways people can use values clarification
Examine past situations and decisions, reflect on current options and future decisions, or explore how they spend their time by listening activities in typical 24 hour periods
What is a living will
In advance directive that specifies the types of medical treatment patients do and do not want to receive should they become in able to speak for themselves in a terminal or permanently or conscious condition
What does morality focus on
Intentions and actions that are viewed as good or right, compared to those that are viewed as bad or wrong
What is another step to resolve value conflicts
Investigate healthcare system policies as a guide for practice
What does moral courage help nurses provide
It helps nurses provide both ethical and legal patient care
How can value conflicts be resolved if nurses are aware of their own values in the values of other?
It may entail using values clarification and value inquiry activities
What does using ethical thinking to make decisions about care promote
It promotes ethical nursing practice
Moral courage
The ability to surmount here and act protect patients rights and values
What is civil law?
The body of law that deals with relationships between private individuals
What are organizational ethics Committees required by
The joint commission
What are values in nursing
Mental maps for decision making that endure for a significant time in one's life Ideas used to determine what is right or wrong
What does capacity mean
Mental or physical disability
What must a nurse do to fill the commitment to the patients during a crisis
Nurse agrees to be a resort to a patient during the crisis the nurse must fulfill commitment
What is civil law also referred to
Private law
What is moral failure
Thoughts of regret loss and kill as well as feelings of powerlessness
Nurses who view conflict as negative might feel ____
Threatened because their own values for self competence, duty, success, authority, and esteem maybe question
What is a worldview?
Unquestioned framework or predominant set up assumptions through which people view life. A perspective and outlook
How does case study incidence provide ways to facilitate the values inquiry process in nursing
Using a viewpoint lens to understand values can help nurses see how values differ depending on one's viewpoint
What are different types of strategies used to resolve ethical dilemmas
Validate feelings, conduct a case analysis, identify outcomes, identify shirt and long-term goals, clarify accountabilities, follow through, resolve actions and evaluate impact
When are value conflicts most notably seen
When someone is diagnosed with an illness, is considering treatment option, or is in need of end of life care
What are Laws in nursing
Rules or standards of human conduct established by legislative bodies interpreted by courts to protect the rights of citizens
What are advanced directives
legal documents to make medical decision for patients when they are unable
What is privacy?
Involves appropriately using that patient information
Do you ethical dilemmas in healthcare involve
Issues surrounding professional actions in patient care decisions
Do behaviors indicate
Values
What do you religious institution often codified in ritualized into their various activities
Values
What are professional ethics?
Values held by a disciplinary group deemed as having generalize standards of conduct to be held in all situation
Case analysis is one method for _____
Values inquiry
What does worldview determine
Values which guide actions
What does autonomy mean
Creating the conditions in which patients can make their own decisions in light of their values and circumstances
What is the contemporary focus help understand
Cultural meanings experiences and inner emotions
Where did the idea worldview originate
German philosophy
What are beliefs?
Ideas that one accepts as true they may be expressed by such things as decisions opinions and creed
When would a surrogate decisionmaker be needed
Infants and young children, people who are severely mentally handicapped or incapacitated, and people in the persistent vegetative state or coma
What is legal nursing practice based on
It is based on the standards of care in the applicable nurse practice act within a nurses state or territory of licensure
How do children learn Cultural values
Parents guardians and family caregivers
What is informed consent based on
Patience preferences, providers must uphold patients autonomy by respecting cultural diversity
Outcomes for the care and treatment for a terminally ill patient may include goals such as
Planning for pain relief, setting up hospice, identifying a surrogate decisionmaker, in determining whether or not the patient will be resuscitated if cardiac arrest occurs
What are some value clarification methods
Pros and con list, a rating and ranking task approach, a rating approach using a scale, and values check off approach
What are nurses commitments to patients
Providing safe care and maintaining competence in nursing practice
What are the ethical values that guide the behavior of healthcare professional towards patients and their families
Veracity, fidelity, privacy, and confidentiality
When a nurse has a conflict and wishes to understand the values underlying the conflict what question should she ask
What are the claims from the viewpoint of the patient? What are the factors from the viewpoint of the nurse? What are the claims from the viewpoint of the family? What values are represented in each of the viewpoints of the claim statement? What is the cultural worldviewIn orientation system that helps to define each claim as important? What are the possible solution from the point of you of the patient, family, and nurse? What are the advantages and disadvantage is of each possible solution?
What does morality derive from
principles of conscience and that rules are cooperative agreement that can be modified
What is ethics?
A branch of philosophy with emphasis on morality
What did the American hospital association create for patients and families during Hospitalization
A brochure with six basic rights for patients and families, ethical values and legal rules that guide their behavior healthcare professional towards patients and their families
What is a proxy directive sometimes referred to as
A durable power of attorney for health care
What is validation?
A way of acknowledging and identify feelings as credible
How do Peer groups define themselves
By common interests, needs, and problems
How do nurses achieve personal and professional success
By identifying ethical and legal clinical practice problems and by using their knowledge and skills to achieve resolution
Does acceptance promote
Communication necessary for well coordinated health care
What do religious places of worship or institutions form
Communities of belonging anchored in faith traditions that shape a person sense of value
What does Fidelity mean
Faithful to one's commitments and promises
What does identifying outcomes provide
Focus and consistency to treatment plan
How are values codified
In social systems such as family school and religious interactions
When may nurses experience moral failure
In times of uncertainty and when a resolution is not determined or not quickly seen
What are the three main issues that arise regarding resolution of value conflicts
One the perception of conflict, the meaning of resolution, and three the values underlying the resolution process
What is an attitude?
Ones disposition towards an object or situation
Does proxy directive allow patients to designate
Other person to make decisions if they become incapacitated and cannot make decisions independently
It's a loss of privacy occur
Others inappropriately use their access to a person
What are personal values
Our beliefs a person considered highly important and are learned through interactions with social systems
Once information and all the categories has been Considered what can be formulated
Realistic outcomes
What is often embedded in a patient's decision making about health
Religious-based and faith based value systems
What can fidelity also be thought as
Social contract that's exists between patient and any nurse who cares for that patient
What is veracity?
Telling the truth
Does respect for persons mean
That individuals are treated as autonomous agents and that persons who have limited autonomy protected
What is confidentiality?
That information about a patient be kept private
What does a nurses behaviors demonstrate
The value that hold priority
When a nurse takes time to reflect on their behaviors what can it illuminate
Their values and value system
What are healthcare professional obligated to do in the means of veracity
To be honest with patient
What is avoidable moral failure
We're by nurses select an option based on their needs and not the needs of the patient
What do contemporary approaches to morality focus on
What is important to people as individuals or within their roles
What does validation help within the patient
When a person is validated acceptance is perceived
When do value systems help people decide which value is most important
When choosing between alternatives and making decisions
When does unavoidable moral failure occur
When nurses select an option, after careful at the core deliberations, between two compatible moral choices both of which have challenging unintended consequences
What do values clarification method help people identify
Your own values when provided with a specific decision
What is justice?
A concept involving making decisions about resource allocations for society groups
What are principlism approaches
And ethical framework that assesses situations as of right or wrong by outlining in defining major tenets of ethical care, and so called principles
What is value certification methods
Approaches used to help providers or patience identify what is important when giving an option or attributes of options in a decision making situation in order to identify preferences
At the most basic level, infants begin value development within establishment of trust and ________
Autonomy
Adults with capacity to make healthcare decisions have the right ____
Consent to or refused treatment
Organizational ethic committees are important vehicles for working through...
Ethical issues in practice
What does the AHA encourage from ethic committees
The development of Ethic committee as interdisciplinary vehicles for identifying and addressing ethical issues
What is morality?
The set of believes about the standards of right and wrong that help a person determine the correct or permissible action in a given situation
Who can conduct a case analysis
Those directly involved in the case
What certain assumptions underlying the process of value clarification method
Those participating must feel comfortable Identifying and sharing values
When does a dilemma occur for nurses?
When one must choose between two mutually incompatible in similarly waited obligation
When do ethical conflicts arise ?
because the parties involved for different values underlying the goals for treatment for those concerning treatment options
