Question | Answer |
Ethics | the study of conduct and character. Determine what is good for the patient or family of patient. |
Autonomy | the commitment to include client in decision about all aspects of care. |
beneficence | taking positive action to help others. |
nonmaleficence | avoidance to harm or hurt |
justice | advocate, doing what is fair. |
fidelity | A PROMISE to the patient of following through. |
code of ethics' nursing | a set of guiding principles that all members of nursing profession must accept.
- guidelines for correct practice and behavior for nursing occupation. |
Name the "basic principles of code of ethic? | 1. advocacy 2. responsibility 3. accountability 4. confidentiality. |
Advocacy | A code of ethic that refers to nursing who support a cause of health, safety, and the right of the client. |
responsibility | a code of ethics that refers to the respect of obligation (work) to follow through a promise. |
accountability | a code of ethics tat refers to answer for one's own action. |
confidentiality | a code of ethic that is protected through HIPPA, that no evidence of health status or health history can be submitted or send without a person's notification. |
HIPPA | Health insurance and Portability and Accountability act of 1996. |
Value | a personal belief about the worth of a given idea, custom, or object that sets standards influence behavior. |
How does a given value come to be? | 1. VALUE FORMATION 2. VALUE CLARIFICATION |
value formation | a personal belief that comes from the raised background given to the environment and care of parental background. AKA child rearing. |
value clarification | the resolve of an ethical problem which one has to cope for and either tolerate or disagree with another person's value. |
what is dentology? | a ethical theory through philosopher, (Immanuel Kant), that givens meaning to action as right or wrong if they are based with character. |
What ethic principle does dentology is focused on? | Autonomy, the understanding of a patient's presence in legal decision with medical care. |
What is utilitarianism? | a part of ethics that gives meaning to an object of decided importance weighed on the usefulness of it's action. |
what is another meaning of utilitarianism? | consequentialism |
What is the difference between dentology vs. utilitarnism? | Denotlogy focuesed on the purpose or action of the event.
Utilitarnism always refers to the consequence or effect of the purpose. |
What is feminist ethics? | A part of ethics that focuses on inequalities between people.
- it likes to focus on the natural relation between a conflict. |
ethic of care | - focuses on the importance of understanding a relationship, especially if they are related to an emergency. |
Futile care | the patients right to refuse care from a doctor or medical staff. |
genetic screening | a way to prevent a disease from occurring through scanning a person's dna for a gene that can cause a disease. |