Importance Of Ethical Dilemmas In Nursing

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“Ethical dilemmas are problems that involve more than one choice and stem from the different values and beliefs of the decision makers” (ATI Nursing Education, 2013, pg. 17). In a previous acute care clinical, the floor I was assigned to was understaffed for the day shift and each nurse was assigned to care for six patients. This is an ethical dilemma because it directly affects the individual care of each patient and it puts each nurse at a higher risk for making errors within the patient’s care. The increased responsibility of the nurses also directly affects the ethical principles of patient treatment which include, autonomy, nonmaleficence, beneficence, justice, veracity, confidentiality, and fidelity. At the beginning of my clinical, while asking for my assigned patients, the charge nurse informed me that at the moment, the floor only had four nurses staffed for twenty-four patients. The charge nurse did attempt to find more nurses that would be willing to come in and work but was unsuccessful. The nurses on the …show more content…

The nurses were obviously stressed, but effectively hid their stress from the patients and worked hard at putting in the extra effort to give the patients the best care. I did not see any short cuts taken regarding patient care from the nurse I followed. I did see some tasks not beginning done in the ideal timely manner, but in the end were completed. The nurse assigned to me did not make me feel like a burden to him and I appreciated that. I understood that he needed the time he had to think his steps through and get the task done at hand promptly so that he could get to all six of his patients within a time frame. As nurses, we must remember that “the main goal of the healthcare system is to protect, maintain, and promote the safety of care delivered to the public” and this is especially true when you have an increased patient workload (Jasper, Kangsniemi, Turunen, & Vaismoradi, 2013, pg.

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