Nursing Case Study: Patient Centered Care

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Case Study: Patient Centered Care As a Nurse, one can choose which area and field of work they particularly like and would enjoy working in. For example, if someone struggles dealing with babies, children or child abuse cases, it would be strongly suggested to not work in pediatrics. Working in a hospital setting, it is unsure as to what type and class of patients are going to walk in the door. As a nurse, personal values, beliefs, and morals need to be set aside when it comes to patient safety and patient centered care. All patients are treated equal regardless of their socioeconomic status, race, gender, health history or physical limitations. The author enjoys being around different cultures, and socioeconomic classes of people. It is …show more content…

For patients who are less affluent than the nurse, it is important to respectfully teach the patient about particular health care issues so they can be avoided in the future. Provide a nursing care plan that is comprehensive and easy to understand. For more affluent patients, it is important to maintain the same level of care the nurse would provide to anyone else. The affluence should not make the nurse feel less than or that he/she is not worthy of caring for that patient. It is important not to cater, spend more time, or provide better care for that patient and their family than the nurse normally would for their patient next …show more content…

The author feels that patient centered care cannot be compromised due to a patient’s socioeconomic status. Nurses are held to a strict Code of Ethics, set by the American Nurses Association (ANA) along with policies set by the employer. The first provision of the ANA Code of Ethics states, “the nurse, in all professional relationships, practices with compassion and respect for the inherent dignity, worth, and uniqueness of every individual, unrestricted by considerations of social or economic status, personal attributes, or the nature of health problems” (ANA, 2011). Nurses are expected to abide by the Code of Ethics throughout their practice, unlike Helen who blatantly makes her personal beliefs

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