Role Of Ethics In Nursing

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This essay will focus on an ethical dilemma experienced out in a practice placement whilst examining the views of deontology and drawing on relevant literature, identifying the ethical and legal issues and principals involved on an ethical decision or action. It will examine the possible courses of actions health care practitioners that can be faced with the chosen ethical dilemma, whilst focusing on the for and against arguments that support and reject those available actions. Drawing to an ending that makes and ethically sound decision on what health care practitioners are ‘ought’ to do in this dilemma.
Nurses face ethical issues each day regardless of their branch and practice area, they face decisions which may impact on them or their …show more content…

Autonomy promotes an individual’s ability to self-generate personal decisions independently, nurses are required to promote each patients autonomy when beneficial, suggesting that Mrs X should be able to self-determine what the course of action is within her own treatment for her heart condition, enabling her more control (Beauchamp and Childress, 2009). Another is justice, justice is quite a broad term within nursing ethics, mostly meaning that justice is served when there is a fair distribution of good and bad, justice can be served if Mrs X is aware of her condition and she can then make use of the fairly distributed services available to her, such as a meeting with the specialist heart nurse and possibly having an input on her own funeral service (Beauchamp and Childress, 2009). Beneficence is another key principle within nursing, generally meaning that a nurse must act in a way which is beneficial to their patients as well as assisting each patient’s wellbeing, the nurse could provide this to Mrs X by providing her with the services Mrs X may need to help provide her with justice and autonomy within her new diagnosis (Beauchamp and Childress, 2009). Non-maleficent is also a key principle, acting in a way which is non-maleficent means the nurse is doing no harm towards her patients and refraining from actions that can or may cause more harm than intended or needed (Beauchamp and Childress, 2009) …show more content…

Consequentialists believe that the more good of an act conducted means the consequences will be more beneficial than not (Slowther et al, 2004., Beauchamp and Childress, 2009). Virtue ethics is the last ethical approach and mainly focuses on the morals and virtues of the individual and is the key difference between Consequentialism and deontology (Slowther et al, 2004., Beauchamp and Childress, 2009). This theory states that when the individual is faced in a moral dilemma they will chose the correct moral action based on their virtuous characters as a person. The ethical principles are classed as virtues (Slowther et al,

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