Title: Ethical and Bioethical Issues in Nursing and Health Care
1Ethical and Bioethical Issues in Nursing and
Health Care
2Key Concepts
- Selected ethical theories and principles
- Relationship between ethics and morality in
relation to nursing practice - Ethical decision-making model
- Ethical and bioethical dilemmas
3Nursing Ethics
- System of principles concerning the action of the
nurse in relationships with patients, families,
other health care providers, policy makers, and
society
4Code of Ethics
- Implicit values and standards for the profession
- American Nurses Association (ANA)
- ANA Code of Ethics
- International Council of Nurses (ICN)
- ICN Code for Nurses
5Bioethics
- Interdisciplinary field within health care that
has evolved with modern medicine to address
questions created as science and technology
produce new ways of knowing - Physicians, nurses, social workers,
psychiatrists, clergy, philosophers, and
theologians are joining to address ethical
questions in health care
6Dilemmas for Health Professionals
- Life and death
- Quality of life
- Right to decide
- Informed consent
- Alternative treatment issues
7Dilemmas Created by Technology
- Illnesses once leading to mortality are now
classified as chronic illnesses - Cost is a consequence of prolonging life with
technology
8Ethical Decision Making
- Answering difficult questions
- What does it mean to be ill or well?
- What is the proper balance between science and
technology and the good of humans? - Where do we find balance when science allows us
to experiment with the basic origins of life?
9Balancing Science and Morality
- Nurses must examine life and its origins, as well
as its worth, usefulness, and importance - What does it mean to be ill or well?
- What is the proper balance between science and
technology and the good of humans? - Nurses must understand their own values and seek
to understand the values of others
10Health Care Decisions
- Patient
- Family
- Nurse
- Transdisciplinary team
11Values Formation and Moral Development
- Value Personal belief about worth that acts as a
guide to behavior - Value system Entire framework on which actions
are based - Values clarification Process by which people
examine personal values and how the values
function as part of the whole
12Values Formation and Moral Developmentcontd
- Moral development Forming a world view and value
system in an evolving, continuous, dynamic
process that moves along a continuum of
development
13Examining Values Systems
- Nurses must examine their own values
- Nurses must commit to a virtuous values system
14World View
- Provides a cohesive model for life
- Encourages personal responsibility for living
life - Prepares one for making ethical choices
15Learning Right and Wrong
- Infants
- No concept of right or wrong
- If basic need for trust is met, will develop
foundation for secure moral thought - School-age children
- Have learned that good behavior is rewarded and
bad behavior is punished - Begin to make choices based on an understanding
of good and bad
16Learning Right and Wrongcontd
- Adolescents
- Question moral values and relevance to society
- Become aware of contradictions in adults values
systems - Adults
- Strive to make sense of contradictions
- Develop own morals and values
- Begin to make choices based on internalized set
of principles
17Moral Development Theory
- Kohlbergs theory
- Most widely accepted
- Cognitive developmental process sequential in
nature - Rules imposed by authority
- Conformity to expected social and religious mores
- Autonomous thinker strives for a moral code
beyond the issues of authority and reverence
18Essential Values for the Professional Nurse
- Altruism
- Equality
- Esthetics
- Freedom
- Human dignity
- Justice
- Truth
19Ethical Theories
- Utilitarianism
- Greatest good for the most people
- Assumes that an action is right if it leads to
the greatest balance of good consequences or to
the fewest possible bad consequences - Deontology
- Decision is right if it conforms to an overriding
moral duty and wrong if it violates that moral
duty
20Purpose of Ethical Principles
- Establish common ground between nurse, patient,
family, other health care professionals, and
society to discuss ethical questions and make
ethical decisions - Permit people to take a consistent position on
specific or related issues - Provide an analytical framework by which moral
problems can be evaluated
21Autonomy
- Principle of respect for the person
- Unconditional intrinsic value for all
- People are free to form judgments and actions as
long as they do not infringe on others - Concepts of freedom and informed consent are
grounded in this principle
22Beneficence
- To promote goodness, kindness, and charity
- To abstain from injuring others and to help
others further their well-being by removing them
from harm - Common bioethical conflict results from an
imbalance between the demands of beneficence and
those of the health care delivery system
23Nonmaleficence
- Implies a duty
- Not to inflict harm
- To abstain from injuring others
- To help others further their own well-being by
removing harm
24Veracity
- Principle of truth-telling
- Consumers expect accurate and precise information
- For trust to develop between providers and
patients, there must be truthful communication - The challenge is to mesh the need for truthful
communication with the need to protect
25Ethical Decision-Making Model
- Situation assessment procedure
1. Identify ethical issues and problems 2.
Identify and analyze available alternatives
3. Select one alternative 4. Justify the
selection
26Identify Ethical Issues and Problems
- What is the issue?
- What are the hidden issues?
- What are the complexities of the situation?
- Is anything being overlooked?
27Identify and Analyze Available Alternatives
- What are the reasonable possibilities for action?
- How do different parties want to resolve the
problem? - What ethical principles are required for each
alternative?
28Identify and Analyze Available Alternativescontd
- What assumptions are required, and what are their
implications for future actions? - What additional ethical problems do alternatives
raise?
29Select One Alternative
- Integration of multiple factors
- Blend ethical theory, principles, and values
30Justify the Selection
- Specify reasons for action
- Clearly present ethical basis for these reasons
- Understand the shortcomings of the justification
- Anticipate objections to the justification
31Bioethical Dilemmas
- Life
- Reproduction
- Death
- Dilemmas in between
- Injustice and the right to health care
- Organ transplantation and allocation of scarce
resources
32Ethical Challenges
- Veracity
- Paternalism
- Autonomy
- Accountability