values - ANS-personal belief about the worth of a given idea, attitufe, custom or object that influence
behavior
altruism - ANS-concern for the welfare of others
autonomy - ANS-right to self-determinication
human dignity - ANS-respect for worth and uniqueness of individuals
integrity - ANS-practicing within a code of ethics and standards of practice
social justice - ANS-upholding moral, legal, and humanistic principles
T - ANS-T or F: emotions influence our ability to perceive ethical values and to make ethical judgments
ANA Code of Ethics - ANS-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.
primary - ANS-the nurse's ____ commitment is to the patient, whether an individual, family, group, or
community
respect for persons - ANS-most fundamental right
justice - ANS-fairness; rightfulness
informed consent - ANS-An ethical principle requiring that research participants be told enough to enable
them to choose whether they wish to participate.
right to refuse treatment - ANS-the legal right of patients to refuse certain forms of treatment
beneficence - ANS-"the doing of good", inflict no harm or evil
Nonmaleficence - ANS-DUTY TO DO NO HARM
double effect - ANS-A situation in which an action (such as administering opiates) has both a positive effect
(relieving a terminally ill person's pain) and a negative effect (hastening death by suppressing respiration).
veracity - ANS-telling the truth without withholding information
fidelity - ANS-agreement to keep promises including revising plan of care as needed
patient advocacy - ANS-The act of speaking and acting on behalf of the patient's needs and well-being.
accountability - ANS-Willingness to take credit and blame for actions.
ethics committees - ANS-groups of psychologists or other professionals who look over each proposed
research study and judge it according to its safety and consideration for the participants in the study
Nurse Practice Act - ANS-statute in each state and territory that regulates the practice of nursing (purpose
is to protect the health and safety of citizens)
negligence - ANS-failure to act as a reasonably prudent person would have in specific circumstances;
conduct that falls below a standard of care
malpractice - ANS-negligence applied to acts of a professional, unintentional tort; nursing care falling below
a standard of care
Patient Self-Determination Act - ANS-A federal law passed in 1990 that requires hospitals and other health
care providers to provide written information to patients regarding their rights under state law to make
medical decisions and execute advance directives.
advanced directives - ANS-Communicates a client's wishes regarding and end-of-life care should the client
become unable to do so. PSDA requires that all health care facilities ask if a patient has advanced
directives upon admission.
assault - ANS-threat or an attempt to make bodily contact WITH ANOTHER PERSON WITHOUT THE
PERSON'S CONSENT, PRODUCES "FEAR"
battery - ANS-unpermissible, unprivileged touching by one person of another, assault is carried out
libel - ANS-written defamation of character
slander - ANS-verbal defamation of chracter
against medical advice - ANS-AMA
T - ANS-T or D: restraint of any kind is considered a form of imprisonment
confidentiality - ANS-protection of private information, but there are some exceptions that are necessary for
patient care
HIPAA - ANS-Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
fraud - ANS-willful and purposeful misrepresentation
occurrence report - ANS-confidential document that describes any patient accident while the person is on
the premises of a health care agency
Category | exam bundles |
Comments | 0 |
Rating | |
Sales | 0 |