Group 5 Report in NCM 108
Group 5 Report in NCM 108
Group 5 Report in NCM 108
BSN 2A
Table of Contents
Ethical Consideration in Leadership and Management
❏ Refers to the ability to recognize the moral good, distinguish a moral right
from wrong, and must have the standard with measure or compare the
good thing and bad thing
❏ Moral Discernment defines the moral convictions that determine one's
behavior and ultimately one's life.
Example:
A nurse who works in an abortion operating room, even if she does not
agree with what the doctor is doing, is too closely related to the evil to be
permitted to continue in her job.
Principle of Lesser Evil
❏ The principle that when faced with selecting from two immortal options, the
one which is lease immortal should be chosen.
Example:
When your professor asks you what your classmate deserving grade is and
the professor lets you pick if 3.0 or 5.0, even tho you know those are both low
grades you will pick 3.0 because it is the lesser evil and your classmate will not
fail the subject.
Principle of Double Effects
❏ If doing something morally good has a morally bad side-effect, it's ethically
OK to do it providing the bad side-effect wasn’wasn't intended. That is true
even if you foresaw that the bad effect would probably happen.
Example: In cases when saving the life of a pregnant woman causes the death
of her unborn child
Performing an abortion when continuing the pregnancy would risk killing
the mother.
Ethical Consideration in Leadership and
Management
● Also consider how one's own motives and other circumstances may
contribute to or nullify the effectiveness of these other possible actions
as means to fuldill ones fundamental commitment
● Among the possible means not excluded or nullified, select one by
which one is most likely to fulfill that commitment and act on it.
Conscience Formation
Personal Freedom
● Free - Able to choose.
● Unfree - Impeded by some obstacles such as fear and anger
Objective Value
● Correct - subjective conforms to the objective moral values
● Objective - norms of morality erroneous lack of conformity to the objective
norms of morality.
● Culpable - one is in error and therefore responsible.
● Inculpable - has erred in good faith.
Qualities of Conscience cont…
Moral Attitude
● Lax - careless in its effort to seek the truth
● Strict - follow to the letter
● Scrupulous - tends to judge sin to be present when there is none
● Pharisaical - judgemental towards other
● Clear
● Callous - no sensitivity to pain
Ethical Consideration in Leadership and
Management
Nurses have an obligation not to inflict harm and not to allow others to inflict harm. They must also promote
good actions on behalf of their patients.
BENEFICENCE
Nurses have a strong duty to act in ways that benefit individuals, communities, and society. Beneficence is
rooted in the innate love we feel for humanity and the drive to demonstrate that love through our actions.
AUTONOMY
Autonomy is the ability to explain one’s needs and make fully informed decisions about one’s health. Illness
may threaten a patient’s autonomy. However, nurses are obligated to honor a patient’s autonomous actions.
JUSTICE
Nurses are responsible for ensuring that healthcare benefits and burdens are distributed fairly throughout
the population. The uneven distribution of healthcare resources is related to societal inequalities and
personal prejudices
Following the Nursing Code of Ethics
Macro Allocation
- Macro Allocation is usually the province of Congress, state legislatures,
insurance companies, private foundations, and health organizations as society
aims to determine how much should be expended and what kinds of goods
and services will be made available.
Micro Allocation
- Micro-allocation is the more personal determination of who will receive scarce
resources, such as intensive-care beds, advanced technology, or organ
transplants.
Two-Tier System and Decent Minimum
❖ The 1988 Legislature acted on these initiatives, making Oregon the first
jurisdiction to explicitly decide on a rationing system for health care in the
United States.
The most disturbing of our rationing methods has to do with the fact that cultural and
social barriers still bar for many of our citizens to receive healthcare:
In medicine:
Category 1 - Immediate
Category 2 - Urgent
Category 3 - Non urgent
Ethical Consideration in Leadership and
Management
1. Turnover
2. Funding
3. Workload
4. Issues regarding malpractice in nursing
5. Issues related to staffing
6. Ethics
7. Issue in curriculum development in nursing
Medico Legal
Employment Issues
Issues
- Loss of trust
- Loss of self-determination
- Loss of autonomy
- Loss of liberty
- Exclusion
- Physical harm
- Discrimination
- Stigmatization
- Power imbalance
What does the Law Says?
- The law upholds the right to privacy by protecting individual
personal information. The National Privacy Commission
protects individual personal information by regulating the
processing of personal information.
Section 12
Conditions under which processing
Personal Information is allowed…
SENSITIVE PERSONAL INFORMATION
Legitimate Purpose
Proportionally
Transparency
Not too long ago, patient education relied primarily on written materials
about disease processes, medication, medical management, and self-care
instruction guidelines. Today, the Internet and mobile technology have made
health information available to patients anywhere.
EHRs and the ability to exchange health information electronically can help
you provide higher quality and safer care for patients while creating
tangible enhancements for your organization. EHRs help providers better
manage care for patients and provide better health care.
Challenges in Technology
1. Inadequate Staffing
2. Mandatory Overtime
3. Inefficiencies and Errors in Data Sharing
4. Privacy Issues & Technology in Healthcare
Organizations
Ethical Issues Related to Technology in the
Delivery of Health Care
The unique relationship between doctors and patients requires trust built by
the ethical care of patients and family. Technology in health care can
continue to move fast and break things, including breaking the trust
between patients, family, and staff.
An ethical issue affects quality of care, and it may impact patient safety.
Substandard Medical Devices And Medical Equipment
New ethical problems regarding the use of science and technology are
always arising. When is it right to use science and technology to apply to
real-life scenarios and when does it impede human rights?
Neurotechnology and privacy
● What level of control should individual patients have over the use of
their private health information that becomes part of public health
databases?
● How can healthcare providers ensure equitable access to expensive
technologies that not only treat illnesses but also promise to promote
longevity and enhance patients’ quality of life?
● What policies could help avoid “genetic discrimination” when medical
test results reveal conditions or genetic susceptibilities to specific
diseases that weren’t the subject of the original tests?
● What effect will AI-based medical care have on the relationship
between patients and their doctors and other healthcare providers?
Using technology in health care may have a great benefits but there is
always a disadvantage. It is the obligation of a nurse to act for the benefit
of patients by supporting patient's right, prevent harm and remove
conditions that could cause harm.