Results for ' nursing ethics'

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  1.  26
    Nurses’ ethical challenges when providing care in nursing homes during the COVID-19 pandemic.A. H. Hillestad, A. M. M. Rokstad, S. Tretteteig, S. G. Julnes, B. Lichtwarck & S. Eriksen - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (1):32-45.
    Background: Older, frail patients with multimorbidity are at an especially high risk for disease severity and death from COVID-19. The social restrictions proved challenging for the residents, their relatives, and the care staff. While these restrictions clearly impacted daily life in Norwegian nursing homes, knowledge about how the pandemic influenced nursing practice is sparse. Aim: The aim of the study was to illuminate ethical difficult situations experienced by Norwegian nurses working in nursing homes during the COVID-19 pandemic. (...)
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  2.  18
    Nursing ethics, 1880s to the present: an archaeology of lost wisdom and identity.Marsha Fowler - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This important text draws on decades of research, arguing that modern nursing germinated and grew an ethics from its own native soil, that is a rich, fulsome and philosophically informed; grounded in the tradition, and practice of nursing. This systematic and comprehensive book is an essential contribution for students and scholars of nursing ethics.
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  3.  11
    Nursing ethics.Megan-Jane Johnstone (ed.) - 2015 - Los Angeles: SAGE Reference.
    Volume 1. Developing theoretical foundations for nursing ethics -- volume 2. Nursing ethics pedagogy and praxis -- volume 3. Politics and future directions on nursing ethics.
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  4.  26
    Nursing Ethics Into the Next Millennium: a context-sensitive approach for nursing ethics.Kim Lützén - 1997 - Nursing Ethics 4 (3):219-226.
    The aim of this article is to argue for the need for a context-sensitive approach to the understanding of ethical issues in nursing practice as we face the next millennium. This approach means that the idea of universalism must be questioned because ethics is an interpersonal activity, set in a specific context. This view is based on issues that arise in international collaborative research as well as in research focused on ethical problems in nursing practice. Moral values (...)
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  5.  43
    Nursing Ethics Education: are we really delivering the good(s)?Martin Woods - 2005 - Nursing Ethics 12 (1):5-18.
    The vast majority of research in nursing ethics over the last decade indicates that nurses may not be fully prepared to ‘deliver the good(s)’ for their patients, or to contribute appropriately in the wider current health care climate. When suitable research projects were evaluated for this article, one key question emerged: if nurses are educationally better prepared than ever before to exercise their ethical decision-making skills, why does research still indicate that the expected practice-based improvements remain elusive? Hence, (...)
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  6.  29
    Teaching Nursing Ethics by Cases: a personal perspective.Stephen Holland - 1999 - Nursing Ethics 6 (5):434-436.
    This article is a reflection on the use of case study material in the teaching of ethics to nursing students. Given the main aims of a course in ethics for nurses and the limited effectiveness of formal moral theory, it seems inevitable that the mainstay of nursing ethics courses will continue to be case study material. This approach has recently been criticized on a number of grounds. The author suggests here that disquiet over teaching (...) in this way should motivate a concern not with whether, but how, teaching by cases is to be undertaken. (shrink)
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  7.  49
    Nurse ethical sensitivity: An integrative review.Aimee Milliken - 2018 - Nursing Ethics 25 (3):278-303.
    Background: Ethical sensitivity has been identified as a foundational component of ethical action. Diminished or absent ethical sensitivity can result in ethically incongruent care, which is inconsistent with the professional obligations of nursing. As such, assessing ethical sensitivity is imperative in order to design interventions to facilitate ethical practice and to ensure nurses recognize the nature and extent of professional ethical obligations. Aim: To review and critique the state of the science of nurse ethical sensitivity and to synthesize findings (...)
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  8.  40
    Nursing ethics: a virtue-based approach.Alan E. Armstrong - 2007 - New York: Palgrave.
    Reacting against the dominance of obligation-based moral theories in both general and nursing ethics, the author proposes a 'strong' (action-guiding) account of a virtue-based approach to moral decision-making within contemporary nursing practice. Merits and criticisms of obligation and virtue-based approaches to morality are identified and examined. One of the author's central premises is that the notions of moral goodness and badness carry more moral weight than the traditionally important notions of moral rightness and wrongness. Therefore, the author (...)
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  9.  41
    Nursing ethics in modern China: conflicting values and competing role requirements.Samantha Mei-che Pang - 2003 - New York: Rodopi.
    One INTRODUCTION: IN SEARCH OF THE VOICES OF NURSES IN CHINA Two motives launched this study to search for the voices of nurses in China. ...
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  10.  66
    Nursing Ethics in Everyday Practice: Connie M. Ulrich , 2012, Sigma Theta Tau International.Anne Simmonds - 2013 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 10 (3):407-409.
  11.  25
    Nurses’ ethical challenges caring for people with COVID-19: A qualitative study.Yuxiu Jia, Ou Chen, Zhiying Xiao, Juan Xiao, Junping Bian & Hongying Jia - 2021 - Nursing Ethics 28 (1):33-45.
    Background: Ethical challenges are common in clinical nursing practice, and an infectious environment could put nurses under ethical challenges more easily, which may cause nurses to submit to negative emotions and psychological pressure, damaging their mental health. Purpose: To examine the ethical challenges encountered by nurses caring for patients with the novel coronavirus pneumonia (COVID-19) and to provide nurses with suggestions and support regarding promotion of their mental health. Research design and method: A qualitative study was carried out using (...)
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  12.  56
    Nurse ethical awareness: Understanding the nature of everyday practice.Aimee Milliken & Pamela Grace - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (5):517-524.
    Much attention has been paid to the role of the nurse in recognizing and addressing ethical dilemmas. There has been less emphasis, however, on the issue of whether or not nurses understand the ethical nature of everyday practice. Awareness of the inherently ethical nature of practice is a component of nurse ethical sensitivity, which has been identified as a component of ethical decision-making. Ethical sensitivity is generally accepted as a necessary precursor to moral agency, in that recognition of the ethical (...)
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  13.  47
    Nurses’ Ethical Perceptions of Health Care and of Medical Clinical Research: an audit in a French university teaching hospital.Ghislaine Benhamou-Jantelet - 2001 - Nursing Ethics 8 (2):114-122.
    Very few data exist in France on: (1) nurses’ knowledge and behaviour concerning ethical decisions in clinical practice; and (2) their knowledge of ethical rules in clinical research. This questionnaire-based audit tried mainly to assess these questions in a large French university teaching hospital. Of the 257 questionnaires distributed to nurses in 23 clinical units of the hospital, 206 were returned (80% response rate). When responding to the vignette describing a clinical situation requiring an ethical decision to be made, most (...)
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  14.  29
    Nursing Ethics: What Lies Ahead? The Case of Bulgaria.Sashka Popova - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (1):69-72.
    In Bulgaria, we are sharing a transition to a civic society and a market economy, which means transferring to new parameters of our culture. Many old customs based on coer cion, obedience and unacceptable interference are gradually dying out, and new princi ples tend to shape the way we live our collective lives. These include the ethics of partnership, which tend to create an assertion of individual rights and an affirmation of free will and autonomy, and within which the (...)
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  15.  73
    Nurses’ Ethical Conflicts: what is really known about them?Barbara K. Redman & Sara T. Fry - 2000 - Nursing Ethics 7 (4):360-366.
    The purpose of this article is to report what can be learned about nurses’ ethical conflicts by the systematic analysis of methodologically similar studies. Five studies were identified and analysed for: (1) the character of ethical conflicts experienced; (2) similarities and differences in how the conflicts were experienced and how they were resolved; and (3) ethical conflict themes underlying four specialty areas of nursing practice (diabetes education, paediatric nurse practitioner, rehabilitation and nephrology). The predominant character of the ethical conflicts (...)
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  16.  35
    Nurses’ ethical decision-making during end of life care in South Korea: a cross-sectional descriptive survey.Sanghee Kim & Arum Lim - 2021 - BMC Medical Ethics 22 (1):1-9.
    BackgroundAlthough nurses are crucial to ensure patients’ peaceful death in hospitals, many nurses experience various ethical conflicts during end-of-life care. Therefore, research on nurses’ entire ethical decision-making process is required to improve nurses’ ethical decision-making in end-of-life care. This study aimed to identify Korean nurses’ ethical decision-making process based on their moral sensitivity to end-of-life patients.MethodsIn total, 171 nurses caring for terminal patients responded to the survey questionnaire. To measure the participants’ moral sensitivity and ethical decision-making process, we used the (...)
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  17. (4 other versions)Nursing ethics.Ian E. Thompson - 1983 - New York: Churchill Livingstone. Edited by Kath M. Melia & Kenneth M. Boyd.
     
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  18.  28
    Should nursing ethics be distinguished from medical ethics?Shamima Parvin Lasker - 2012 - Bangladesh Journal of Bioethics 2 (3):2.
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  19.  63
    A Nursing Ethic: the moral voice of experienced nurses.Martin Woods - 1999 - Nursing Ethics 6 (5):423-433.
    Nursing acts occur in thousands of instances daily, being a major component of professional health care delivery in institutions, communities and homes. It follows that the ethical practice of most nurses is put to the test on an everyday rather than an occasional basis. Hence, within nursing practice there must be a rich and deep seam of reflective interpretation and practical wisdom that is 'embedded' within the experiences of every experienced nurse. This article presents discussion on some of (...)
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  20.  16
    Nursing ethics: for hosital and private use.Isabel Hampton Robb - 1903 - Cleveland,: J.B. Savage.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  21.  2
    (1 other version)Nursing ethics: across the curriculum and into practice.Janie B. Butts - 2016 - Burlington, MA: Jones & Bartlett Learning. Edited by Karen L. Rich.
    Introduction to ethics -- Introduction to bioethics and ethical decision making -- Ethics in professional nursing practice -- Reproductive issues and nursing ethics -- Infant and child nursing ethics -- Adolescent nursing ethics -- Adult health nursing ethics -- Ethics and the nursing care of elders -- Ethical issues in end-of-life nursing care -- Psychiatric/mental health nursing ethics -- Public health nursing ethics (...)
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  22.  28
    Normative nursing ethics: A literature review and tentative recommendations.Eric Vogelstein & Alison Colbert - 2020 - Nursing Ethics 27 (1):7-15.
    We describe the results and implications of a literature review that identifies the number of normative and empirical articles, respectively, that have appeared in Nursing Ethics in each year from 1994 to 2017. The results of our analysis suggest a powerful trend away from normative scholarship and toward empirical investigation within the field of nursing ethics, both overall and comparatively. We argue that there are several important negative consequences of this trend, and we propose some potential (...)
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  23.  52
    Nursing Ethics Through the Life Span.Elsie L. Bandman & Bertram Bandman - 1990 - McGraw-Hill/Appleton & Lange.
    Using philosophical guidelines--and applying these guidelines throughout a patient's lifespan--this text assists readers in making ethically sound choices in nursing. It explores both traditional and contemporary ethical theories and acknowledges changing trends in the health field, incorporating issues such as managed care. Includes clinical case studies within each chapter. Incorporates a new organization in Part Two, in three sections entitled "Developmental Highlights," "Issues and Problems," and "Morally Reasoned Nursing Interventions." Provides new "What if?" questions throughout to help apply (...)
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  24.  12
    Nurses’ ethical responsibilities: Whistleblowing and advocacy in patient safety.Ateya Megahed Ibrahim - 2024 - Nursing Ethics 31 (7):1289-1314.
    Background In the dynamic landscape of healthcare, nurses play a crucial role as ethical stewards, responsible for whistleblowing, nurse advocacy, and patient safety. Their duties involve ensuring patient well-being through ethical practices and advocacy initiatives. Aim This study investigates the ethical responsibilities of nurses regarding whistleblowing and advocacy in reporting concerns about patient safety. Research Design A cross-sectional study utilized cluster and simple random sampling to gather a representative sample of actively practicing registered nurses. Data collection involved a demographic form, (...)
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  25.  48
    Nurses' ethical conflict with hospitals: A longitudinal study of outcomes.Alice Gaudine & Linda Thorne - 2012 - Nursing Ethics 19 (6):727-737.
    This study examined the association of nurses’ ethical conflict with hospitals with organizational commitment, stress, turnover intention, absence and turnover. Participants were 410 nurses working at four different Canadian hospitals. A longitudinal design was used where nurses completed a questionnaire to capture ethical conflict, stress and organizational commitment, and one year later, measures of turnover intention, absence and actual turnover were obtained for the same sample. We found three aspects of nurses’ ethical conflict with hospitals: patient care values, value of (...)
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  26.  37
    How Nursing Ethics as a Subject Changes: An analysis of the first 11 years of publication of the journal Nursing Ethics.Verena Tschudin - 2006 - Nursing Ethics 13 (1):65-85.
    By analysing the first, second, 10th and 11th years of publication (i.e. volumes 1, 2, 10, 11) of Nursing Ethics, I will show the significant visible trends in the articles and draw some conclusions. The trends are visible at various levels: from simple analysis of an issue, or a comment on a situation in the early years, to in-depth philosophical and research studies; and from short statements to much longer articles. The ethical approaches used go from either none (...)
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  27.  24
    Nursing Ethics Huddles to Decrease Moral Distress among Nurses in the Intensive Care Unit.Margie Hodges Shaw, Sally A. Norton, Patrick Hopkins & Marianne C. Chiafery - 2018 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 29 (3):217-226.
    BackgroundMoral distress (MD) is an emotional and psychological response to morally challenging dilemmas. Moral distress is experienced frequently by nurses in the intensive care unit (ICU) and can result in emotional anguish, work dissatisfaction, poor patient outcomes, and high levels of nurse turnover. Opportunities to discuss ethically challenging situations may lessen MD and its associated sequela.ObjectiveThe purpose of this project was to develop, implement, and evaluate the impact of nursing ethics huddles on participants’ MD, clinical ethics knowledge, (...)
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  28. Nursing Ethics and Advanced Practice : Neonatal Issues.Peggy Doyle Settle - 2018 - In Pamela June Grace & Melissa K. Uveges, Nursing ethics and professional responsibility in advanced practice. Burlington, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
     
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  29.  30
    Nursing Ethics Into the Next Millennium: a context-sensitive approach for nursing ethics.Kim Lützén - 1997 - Nursing Ethics 4 (3):218-226.
    The aim of this article is to argue for the need for a context-sensitive approach to the understanding of ethical issues in nursing practice as we face the next millennium. This approach means that the idea of universalism must be questioned because ethics is an interpersonal activity, set in a specific context. This view is based on issues that arise in international collaborative research as well as in research focused on ethical problems in nursing practice. Moral values (...)
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  30.  4
    Nursing ethics: normative foundations, advanced concepts, and emerging issues.Jennifer H. Lingler & Michael J. Deem (eds.) - 2024 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    In this chapter, I argue that nursing ethics is rightfully viewed as a distinct field of critical inquiry relevant to the nursing profession and its purposes. While there are areas of overlap and mutual interests with bioethics, medical ethics, and the ethics of other disciplines, nursing ethics is concerned with the particular purposes and perspectives of the profession and problems faced in trying to achieve its goals. Nursing ethics, as a field (...)
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  31.  9
    Teaching and Learning Nursing Ethics.Ursula Gallagher & Kenneth M. Boyd - 1991
    Based on a study undertaken by the Institute of Medical Ethics and the Royal College of Nursing, this book examines what nurses, midwives and health visitors are taught about ethics in the UK. It defines ethics and related terms and discusses their relevance to the practice of nursing.
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  32.  32
    Dialogical Nursing Ethics: the Quality of Freedom Restrictions.Tineke A. Abma, Guy Am Widdershoven, Brenda Jm Frederiks, Rob H. Van Hooren, Frans van Wijmen & Paul Lmg Curfs - 2008 - Nursing Ethics 15 (6):789-802.
    This article deals with the question of how ethicists respond to practical moral problems emerging in health care practices. Do they remain distanced, taking on the role of an expert, or do they become engaged with nurses and other participants in practice and jointly develop contextualized insights about good care? A basic assumption of dialogical ethics entails that the definition of good care and what it means to be a good nurse is a collaborative product of ongoing dialogues among (...)
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  33.  51
    Korean nurses’ ethical dilemmas, professional values and professional quality of life.Kyunghee Kim, Yonghee Han & Ji-su Kim - 2015 - Nursing Ethics 22 (4):467-478.
    Background: In the changing medical environment, professional stress continuously increases as the individual’s quality of life suffers. Of all the healthcare professions, nursing is especially prone to burnout, compassion fatigue and reduced compassion satisfaction, due to the tensions resulting from the physical and psychological stress of caring for extremely ill patients. Objectives: This study examined the professional quality of life of clinical nurses in Korea and the relationship between their experiences in ethical dilemmas and professional values. Methods: This was (...)
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  34.  25
    Nursing ethics as a distinct entity within bioethics: Implications for clinical ethics practice.Bryan Pilkington & Maryanne Giuliante - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (5):671-679.
    The question of whether nursing ethics is a distinct entity within bioethics is an important and thought-provoking one. Though fundamental bioethical principles are appreciated and applied within the practice of nursing ethics, there exist distinct considerations which make nursing ethics a unique subfield of bioethics. In this article, we focus on the importance of relationships as a distinguishing feature of the foundation of nursing ethics, evidenced in its education, practice, and science. Next, (...)
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  35.  26
    Nurses' ethical reflections on caring for people with malodorous exuding ulcers.Elisabeth Lindahl, Fredricka Gilje, Astrid Norberg & Anna Söderberg - 2010 - Nursing Ethics 17 (6):777-790.
    The aim of this study was to illuminate nurses’ reflections on obstacles to and possibilities for providing care as desired by people with malodorous exuding ulcers. Six nurses who took part in a previous study were interviewed. The participants were shown an illustration with findings from a study that elucidated the meaning of living with malodorous exuding ulcers. They were asked to reflect on the obstacles to and possibilities of providing the care desired by the patients. Twelve audio-recorded transcribed interviews (...)
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  36. Nurses’ ethical reasoning in cases of physical restraint in acute elderly care: a qualitative study.Sabine Goethals, Bernadette Dierckx de Casterlé & Chris Gastmans - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (4):983-991.
    In their practice, nurses make daily decisions that are ethically informed. An ethical decision is the result of a complex reasoning process based on knowledge and experience and driven by ethical values. Especially in acute elderly care and more specifically decisions concerning the use of physical restraint require a thoughtful deliberation of the different values at stake. Qualitative evidence concerning nurses’ decision-making in cases of physical restraint provided important insights in the complexity of decision-making as a trajectory. However a nuanced (...)
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  37.  46
    Why the history of nursing ethics matters.Marsha D. Fowler - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (3):292-304.
    Modern American nursing has an extensive ethical heritage literature that extends from the 1870s to 1965 when the American Nurses Association issued a policy paper that called for moving nursing education out of hospital diploma programs and into colleges and universities. One consequence of this move was the dispersion of nursing libraries and the loss of nursing ethics textbooks, as they were largely not brought over into the college libraries. In addition to approximately 100 (...) ethics textbooks, the nursing ethics heritage literature also includes hundreds of journal articles that are often made less accessible in modern databases that concentrate on the past 20 or 30 years. A second consequence of nursing’s movement into colleges and universities is that ethics was no longer taught by nursing faculty, but becomes separated and placed as a discrete ethics (later bioethics) course in departments of philosophy or theology. These courses were medically identified and rarely incorporated authentic nursing content. This shift in nursing education occurs contemporaneously with the rise of the field of bioethics. Bioethics is rapidly embraced by nursing, and as it develops within nursing, it fails to incorporate the rich ethical heritage, history, and literature of nursing prior to the development of the field of bioethics. This creates a radical disjunction in nursing’s ethics; a failure to more adequately explore the moral identity of nursing; the development of an ethics with a lack of fit with nursing’s ethical history, literature, and theory; a neglect of nursing’s ideal of service; a diminution of the scope and richness of nursing ethics as social ethics; and a loss of nursing ethical heritage of social justice activism and education. We must reclaim nursing’s rich and capacious ethics heritage literature; the history of nursing ethics matters profoundly. (shrink)
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  38. Nursing ethics and professional responsibility in advanced practice.Pamela June Grace & Melissa K. Uveges (eds.) - 2018 - Burlington, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
    This book focuses in an in-depth way on the particular problems faced by nurses in various advanced practice roles across the life-span and in front-line care. It is comprehensive textbook broken out into three sections: philosophical foundation, ethics, and specialty focus.
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  39.  19
    Nursing ethics comes of age in India.Daphne Viveka - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (6):637-638.
  40.  49
    Nursing Ethics and Codes of Professional Conduct.Trevor Hussey - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (3):250-258.
    Nurses, like many other professional and semiprofessional groups, have a code of con duct. This raises important philosophical questions about the point of including nursing ethics in nursing education and about the content and methods of such teaching. This paper identifies seven functions that might be fulfilled by professional codes; it discusses the philosophical issues these raise and the implications for teaching professional ethics. It is argued that, far from codes rendering the teaching of ethics (...)
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  41.  30
    Nursing Ethics Student Essay Prizes 2014.Ann Gallagher - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (1):119-119.
  42.  36
    Nursing ethics committees and policy development.Sharon E. Igoe & Susan A. Goncalves - 1997 - HEC Forum 9 (1):20-26.
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  43.  17
    Nursing ethics: The last decade.Verena Tschudin - 2010 - Nursing Ethics 17 (1):127-131.
  44.  11
    Nursing ethics into the next millennium.V. Tschudin & G. Hunt - 1996 - Nursing Ethics 3 (2):95.
  45.  35
    Nurses' Ethical Conflicts in Performance of Utilization Reviews.Sue Ellen Bell - 2003 - Nursing Ethics 10 (5):541-554.
    This article describes the ethical conflicts that a sample of US nurse utilization reviewers faced in their work, and also each nurse’s self-reported ethical orientation that was used to resolve the dilemmas. Data were collected from a sample of 97 registered nurses who were working at least 20 hours per week as utilization reviewers. Respondents were recruited from three managed care organizations that conduct utilization reviews in a large midwestern city. A cross-sectional survey design was used to collect demographic data (...)
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  46.  3
    Nursing ethics in Hungary.Elizabeth Rozsos - 1995 - Nursing Ethics 2 (1):79-80.
  47. International nursing ethics: context and concerns.Anne J. Davis - 2003 - In Verena Tschudin, Approaches to ethics: nursing beyond boundaries. New York: Butterworth-Heinemann. pp. 95--104.
     
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  48.  24
    Changes in Nursing Ethics Education in Lithuania.Jolanta Toliušienė & Eimantas Peičius - 2007 - Nursing Ethics 14 (6):753-757.
    The post-Soviet scene in Lithuania is one of rapid change in medical and nursing ethics. A short introduction to the current background sets the scene for a wider discussion of ethics in health care professionals' education. Lithuania had to adapt rapidly from a politicized nursing and ethics curriculum to European regulations, and from a paternalistic style of care to one of engagement with choices and dilemmas. The relationships between professionals, and between professionals and patients, are (...)
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  49. Nursing Ethics and Advanced Practice : Caring for Adults and Older Adults.Pamela J. Grace & Jane Flanagan - 2018 - In Pamela June Grace & Melissa K. Uveges, Nursing ethics and professional responsibility in advanced practice. Burlington, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
     
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  50. Nursing Ethics and Advanced Practice : Psychiatric and Mental Health Issues.Pamela J. Grace, Elizabeth Lessman & Danny G. Willis - 2018 - In Pamela June Grace & Melissa K. Uveges, Nursing ethics and professional responsibility in advanced practice. Burlington, Massachusetts: Jones & Bartlett Learning.
     
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