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  1. Unravelling The Dilemmas Within Everyday Nursing Practice.C. Johns - 1999 - Nursing Ethics 6 (4):287-298.
    Each day, nurse practitioners are faced with clinical situations and dilemmas that have no obvious right answers. This article sets out the process of ethical mapping as a reflective device to enable practitioners to reflect on dilemmas of practice in order to learn through the experience and inform future practice. Ethical mapping is illustrated around a single experience that an intensive care practitioner shared in an ongoing guided reflection relationship. Within this process the practitioner draws on ethical principles to inform (...)
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  • An Exploration of the Relationship Between Patient Autonomy and Patient Advocacy: implications for nursing practice.Deirdre Hyland - 2002 - Nursing Ethics 9 (5):472-482.
    The purpose of this article is to examine whether patient/client autonomy is always compatible with the nurse’s role of advocacy. The author looks separately at the concepts of autonomy and advocacy, and considers them in relation to the reality of clinical practice from professional, ethical and legal perspectives. Considerable ambiguity is found regarding the legitimacy of claims of a unique function for nurses to act as patient advocates. To act as an advocate may put nurses at personal and professional risk. (...)
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  • Nursing Advocacy: an Ethic of Practice.Nan Gaylord & Pamela Grace - 1995 - Nursing Ethics 2 (1):11-18.
    Advocacy is an important concept in nursing practice; it is frequently used to describe th nurse-client relationship. The term advocacy, however, is subject to ambiguity of interpretation. Such ambiguity was evidenced recently in criticisms levelled at the nursing profession by hospital ethicist Ellen Bernal. She reproached nursing for using 'patient rights advocate' as a viable role for nurses. We maintain that, for nursing, patient advocacy may encompass, but is not limited to, patient rights advocacy. Patient advocacy is not merely the (...)
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  • Relief of Suffering and Regard for Personhood: nurses’ ethical concerns in Japan and the USA.Dawn Doutrich, Peggy Wros & Shigeko Izumi - 2001 - Nursing Ethics 8 (5):449-458.
    The ethical concerns of Japanese nurses are compared with those of previously described nurses from the USA. Patient comfort was a primary concern of nurses from both countries. Participants described an ethical imperative to provide adequate pain medication for patients and prevent unnecessary and uncomfortable invasive tests and procedures, especially at the end of life as the focus changed from ‘cure’ to ‘care’. The notion of regard for personhood varied, based on the communication styles and definition of the self inherent (...)
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  • A Pilot Study of Selected Japanese Nurses' Ideas on Patient Advocacy.Anne J. Davis, Emiko Konishi & Marie Tashiro - 2003 - Nursing Ethics 10 (4):404-413.
    This pilot study had two purposes: (1) to review recent Japanese nursing literature on nursing advocacy; and (2) to obtain data from nurses on advocacy. For the second purpose, 24 nurses at a nursing college in Japan responded to a questionnaire. The concept of advocacy, taken from the West, has become an ethical ideal for Japanese nurses but one that they do not always understand, or, if they do, they find it difficult to fulfil. They cite nursing leadership support as (...)
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  • Undertaking the Role of Patient Advocate: a longitudinal study of nursing students.Insaf Altun & Nermin Ersoy - 2003 - Nursing Ethics 10 (5):462-471.
    Patient advocacy has been claimed as a new role for professional nurses and many codes of ethics for nurses state that they act as patient advocates. Nursing education is faced with the challenge of preparing nurses for this role. In this article we describe the results of a study that considered the tendencies of a cohort of nursing students at the Kocaeli University School of Nursing to act as advocates and to respect patients’ rights, and how their capacities to do (...)
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