Abandonment and Nursing The career of nursing is more than just healing the sick. Nursing often causes nurses to face moral and ethical dilemmas. “Ethics refers to principles of right and wrong behaviors, beliefs, and values (Zerwekh & Garneau, 2015, p. 420).” When new graduate nurses begin their careers the first twelve months are a great time to gain a better understanding of personal beliefs and how they can affect patient care. Nursing is a highly respected profession and patients will seek advice from nurses. Therefore, nurses should learn how to react to situations that may not align completely with their own personal moral or ethical beliefs. Abandonment in the practice of nursing is not only detrimental to the health of patients involved, but to the nurse responsible for their care. If a nurse abandons his or her patients he or she has now been placed in a situation open to possible litigation, board discipline of classes or fines, and loss of licensure. As stated by the Oklahoma Board of Nursing, “abandonment may occur when a licensed nurse fails to provide adequate patient care until …show more content…
Even one instance of abandonment can cause a nurse to find it difficult to have the trust of coworkers. They may also find it problematic trying to gain employment with any past of abandonment. From all this research I have learned additional actions that are forms of abandonment that I hadn’t thought of previously. I feel that I am better prepared to not commit any acts of abandonment now that I have gained new knowledge and understanding. As a nurse I do not want to ever place patients in danger, not only to avoid reprimand from the board of nursing, but also because each patient is some ones loved one and I feel all people no matter what their past is like deserves great nursing care in a nonjudgmental way. Oklahoma Board of
1. Reporting and Responding Two Professional practice issues that correlate with the horrific case of the abuse and mistreatment of Clarence Hausler includes the Principle regarding Professional behaviour being crossed displayed by the employed Carer. ‘Person- centred practice’ furthermore demonstrated within the way Carer Corey Lucas’ nursing practice and MRCF appalling approach to adverse events and open disclosure in response to such incident. Both professional practice issues are seen to be disobeyed by Hausler’s employed carer as shown within the aggressive measures taken by Corey within the scenario. 2. Relating
Nursing Bedside Reporting, Patient Safety, And Satisfaction Scores The American Nurses Association estimates that up to 80% of serious medical errors involve miscommunication between caregivers when patients are transferred or handed off during shift report (ANA 2012). In the nursing profession change of shifts require the successful transfer of information from nurse to nurse to prevent medical errors and adverse events (Sullivan, 2010). Research shows that when patients are included and engaged in their health care there is greater potential to lead to measurable improvements in safety and quality of care.
To help make a choice, they should first look at their personal and professional values that define their nursing practice. After, they need to look at ethical principles and legal documents to help guide their decision. In the end, they must compare and contrast these factors together to come up with the ethical decision that they ultimately feel is best for their
The purpose of the article is “to examine the current state of knowledge about the scope of the nurse turnover problem, definitions of turnover, factors considered to be determinants of nurse turnover, turnover costs and of most importance to the authors, the impact of turnover on patient, nurse, and system outcomes,” (Hayes, 238). Hayes uses his
Philosophy of Nursing Everyone’s values and beliefs about the profession of nursing are all different. The four concepts of nursing are interrelated and all mean something different to every person, too. Throughout this paper, I will be reflecting on my values and beliefs about nursing through the four concepts while comparing them to a nursing theorist with views that are most similar to my own.
The situation I found in the correctional setting was a nurse-centered model, where my colleagues perceived the client as a dangerous criminal who is a threat to the safety of the nurse, prior perceiving him as patient. However, my perception, as a care giver, is to foremost regard the client as a patient who deserves my empathy and care, without losing cognizant that he is a potential
Nurses committing crimes that are completely opposite to the core values of nursing in general makes for a difficult subject. For example, as Jones, a professor in Liverpool, UK says, “as a hospital may attempt to root out the small proportion of nurses who may kill, it may also create requirements on innocent members of staff that seriously challenge the nurse’s right to confidential emotional assistance. This means a nurse may be too intimidated to confide in her colleagues because she is paranoid that they will “turn her in” even if she is completely innocent (212). He goes on to say that this may challenge important notions of civil rights, as the right to confidential emotional assistance is a right of everyone else in society (212). Therefore, being hyperaware of that possibility may be detrimental to a nurse’s success, although it saves patients.
(2014, June 6). Retrieved from ANA American Nurses Association: http://nursingworld.org/DocumentVault/Ethics-1/Code/Code-Provision-1.pdf Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements Provision 2. (2014, June 6). Retrieved from ANA American Nurses Association: http://nursingworld.org/DocumentVault/Ethics-1/Code/Code-Provision-4.pdf Kangasniemi, M. P. (2014). Professional Ethics in Nursing:
Roughly 1.6 million people live in about 17,000 licensed nursing homes, and another projected 90,000 to 1 million live in an estimated 45,000 residential care facilities variously known as assisted living facilities, or adult care homes. Research proposes that the 2.5 million exposed individuals in these settings are at much higher danger for abuse and neglect than older persons who live at home. The all-purpose goal of this paper are to present the obtainable evidence about the nature and possibility of abuse and neglect in nursing homes and other residential care facilities and the causes, as well as to recommend a research program (C., 2003). What defines physical abuse?
My Personal Philosophy and Values of Nursing Nursing is proving care, support, and serve people who are in need. The purpose of nursing is to improve patient 's health condition to a better life. The goal of this paper is to explain my personal philosophy and clarify some of my values of nursing. Personal Philosophy
Utilitarianism and Deontology are two major ethical theories that influence nursing practice. Utilitarian principles of promoting the greatest good for the greatest amount of people parallels the nursing tenet of beneficence. Deontological principles of treating individuals with dignity, and promoting the well-being of the individual parallels the nursing tenet of non-maleficence. Utilitarian and Deontological principles can be utilized to resolve ethical dilemmas that arise in the nursing profession. The purpose of this paper is to define utilitarianism and deontology, discuss the similarities and differences between the two, and to address an ethical dilemma utilizing utilitarian and deontological principles.
This assignment is a reflection of ethical dilemmas in nursing practice as a registered nurse; this paper is based on the group assignment which was completed for NURS3004. This reflection will include an explanation of the role that I portrayed in the group, the preparation that I did for the role, what could have been done differently, how this group assignment has impacted me in terms of working in a team and finally explain how this assignment will assist me in my future clinical practice as a newly registered nurse. The role that I played in the group was a patient who has a mental health disorder and I didn’t want his mother to know about the illness, as a front it seemed as though we had a close relationship. When my mother leaves the room I asked the nurse to keep my illness confidential as she does not really understand it.
“Nurses are doing their best to provide care for their patients and their communities and are supporting each other in the process so that all nurses can fulfill their ethical and professional obligations” (American Nurses Association, 2015, para. 6). Ethical beliefs Nurses face ethical dilemmas every day, it is part of what is required as part of our daily routine. Despite ones personal beliefs on multiple challenging issues, such as choice versus pro-life or life saving measures versus the right to die, it is the nurse’s role to be an advocate for the patient and their needs. Perception of care
The article chosen for the qualitative study was, “Challenges in nursing continuing education: A qualitative study,” by Jalil Eslamian, Mahin Moeini and Marzie Soleimani. The article chosen for the quantitative study is, “Moral Distress experienced by nurses: A quantitative literature review,” by Younjae Oh and Chris Gastmans. The article chosen for the qualitative study is about continuing education in nursing. Education improves the knowledge and enables the nurse to plan and implement proper patient care. Any deviation from care plan can be catastrophic to the patient and to the nurse’s career.
Nightingale acknowledged nurses need principles, ethics, skills, discretion, and compassion (McDonald, 2013). When the patient felt secure in the nurses’ care, healing could begin (McDonald,