Categorieën: Alle - autonomy - competence - confidentiality - justice

door tiffani cloes-fiveash 1 jaar geleden

148

Professional Practice

Nursing professionals are bound by a complex interplay of ethical and legal responsibilities which guide their practice. The core values of autonomy, justice, beneficence, and non-maleficence form the foundation of bioethics in nursing, emphasizing the importance of patient well-being and the preservation of life.

Professional Practice

of

protects

must

and

has

proper

honest relationships

to maintain

prevails

to

to take care of

is

involves

which falls under

deals with

inadequate documentation

failure to meet legal/professional obligations

failure to maintain standards of practice

civil law

improper or unethical conduct

malpractice and misconduct

lead to

has

creates

which is

promotes

needs

leads to

non-harming

good

own decisions

biased

justice

non-maleficence

benficence

autonomy

bioethics

professional approach

altruistic intentions

allow client autonomy

self care

requires

accountability for clients

documentation

causes

distress

conflict

d

Medical assisted situations

personal values

includes

Professional Practice

Nursing Law

legal knowledge
Scope of Practise

Knowledgeable

delegation

obligations

Rights

other healthcare providers

family members

patients

Nursing Act

Standard of practise

Analysis

understanding

practise setting
statues relevant to profession
legal policies
legislation

Responsibility and Accountibility

Accountibility
Aspects

Action

Control

Effectiveness

Rewards

Increased respect

Health Care Team

competence

Skill

Knowledge

Respect

To Employer

Attitude

unsafe practice

Quality

The profession

professional organizations

legal obligation

Quality Assurance

Legislations

Standards of practice

roles and responsibilities

accountability
Protect Client

Professional Approach

Clinical competence

Client advocate

Altruistic Intentions

Duty of care

Safe care

Nursing ethics

Ethical Issues
Frequent issues

Confidentiality

Surrogate decision makers

Advanced care plan

poor staffing ratio

Informed consent to treatment

Protecting patients' rights

Social media
Medical Assistance in dying
Medical Futility
Ethical Distress
Ethical values
Fairness
Truthfulness
Maintaining commitments
Respect for life
Privacy and confidentiality
Client choice
Client well-being
Values
Dignity
Safe Care

Accountable

Competent

Compassionate

Reflections

Justifications

Judgements

Actions

behaviours