Ethical Issues In Nursing Essay

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Care of persons at end of life is now provided by healthcare professionals, which was not always in practice (Slomka, 1992). The medicalisation of life has given medicine the power to become the dominant cultural framework for understanding how to act and the process of death (Harris, 2003). Death now frequently occurs in acute hospitals. Units such as the ICU have the power to orchestrate and control the time of death, by discontinuation of life sustaining treatments (Slomka, 1992). As nurses we have to ask ourselves, is this ethically justifiable to control death, and allow medicalisation to have such power.
In acute hospitals, nurses are providing care to patients at end of life, but unfortunately the situation stands they may not be able to transfer to a facility where their passing would be more dignified, and person centred. Tracker (2008), suggests that acute care nurses have modest exposure to end of life care, compared to those working in a palliative care or long-term facilities. Ethical dilemmas nurses face in the acute setting, is knowing the right action to do for the benefit of the patient but being unable to pursue it (Sonderberg and Norberg, 1993). This may include transferring a patient to a private room, …show more content…

This can be argued to be beneficial for the patient and family, and also cause harm. On one hand, the treatment provides the loved ones with more time together, to say goodbye and it may be what the patient requests. On the other hand, is it ethical to prolong ones’ suffering, as it would cause the patient harm, thus against the principle of non-maleficence. This raises the ethical question, in a growing elderly population, should one prolong frail lives? And as more clinical innovations become available, there is now more which can be done to postpone death (Gillick, Hesse and

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