Bioethics: A Nursing PerspectiveElsevier Health Sciences, 2008 M09 1 - 472 pages The 5th edition of Bioethics provides nursing students with the necessary knowledge and understanding of the ethical issues effecting nursing practice. Groundbreaking in its first edition, Bioethics continues its role as a vital component of nursing education and provides a framework for students to understand the obligations, responsibilities and ethical challenges they will be presented with throughout their careers. This latest edition responds to new and emerging developments in the field and marks a significant turning point in nursing ethics in that it serves not only to inform but also to revitalise and progress debate on the issues presented. |
From inside the book
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... professional practice 11 Understanding moral language 11 What is ethics? 12 What is bioethics? 13 What is nursing ethics? 16 What ethics is not 17 Law 17 Codes of ethics 21 Hospital or professional etiquette 24 Hospital or institutional ...
... professional practice 11 Understanding moral language 11 What is ethics? 12 What is bioethics? 13 What is nursing ethics? 16 What ethics is not 17 Law 17 Codes of ethics 21 Hospital or professional etiquette 24 Hospital or institutional ...
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... professional–client relationship 217 Parents and families 218 Abused and neglected children 218 Responding to the criticisms 219 The problem of maintaining confidentiality 219 The problem of statutory surveillance 220 Preserving the ...
... professional–client relationship 217 Parents and families 218 Abused and neglected children 218 Responding to the criticisms 219 The problem of maintaining confidentiality 219 The problem of statutory surveillance 220 Preserving the ...
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Contents
CHAPTER 1 Professional standards and the requirement to be ethical | 1 |
some working definitions | 9 |
CHAPTER 3 Moral theory and the ethical practice of nursing | 35 |
CHAPTER 4 Crosscultural ethics and the ethical practice of nursing | 71 |
CHAPTER 5 Moral problems and moral decisionmaking in nursing and health care contexts | 93 |
CHAPTRE 6 Patients rights to and in health care | 131 |
CHAPTER 7 Human rights and the mentally ill | 183 |
CHAPTER 8 Ethical issues associated with the reporting of child abuse | 203 |
CHAPTER 10 Euthanasia assisted suicide and the nursing profession | 247 |
CHAPTER 11 Ethical issues in suicide and parasuicide | 291 |
CHAPTER 12 Endoflife decisionmaking and the nursing profession | 319 |
conscientious objection whistleblowing and reporting nursing errors | 349 |
CHAPTER 14 Nursing ethics future moral activism and meeting the challenge to be involved | 385 |
CHAPTER 15 Indigenous perspectives | 391 |
Bibliography | 397 |
461 | |
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Common terms and phrases
abortion accept action advance approach argues assisted attempted Australian autonomy Beauchamp become bioethics caring Chapter child abuse choices claims clinical competent concerning conduct consent considerations considered contexts critically cultural death decide decision decision-making dignity directives discussion doctor duty effectively errors et al ethics euthanasia example experience further given harm health care hospital human important individual instance interests involved issues Journal justice justified killing kind lives matter means mental health moral moral rights nature nurses objection pain particular patients person position possible practice Press prevent principles problems profession professional protection question reason referred refuse regard relationship reported respect responsibility result risk serious significant situation social standards suffering suggest suicide theory things treated treatment understanding University values wrong