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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page summation and analysis of a qualitative study that investigated the manner in which a study sample of nurses reported how they typically conducted obtaining patient consent for care procedures. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khbandd.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
found that nurses frequently reported badgering and coercing patients in order to obtain consent. Furthermore, Aveyard determined that if consent cannot be obtained, nurses will administer care without patient consent.
Based on the studys finding, the researcher concludes that the study sample of nurses possessed a degree of understanding as to the ethical principles of informed consent but did not
apply them consistently within the course of their day-to-day practice. This study underscores the fact that nurses frequently face ethical conflicts between the nursing ethical principles of their obligation
to beneficence and their equally important obligation to respect the right of the patient to autonomy. At least in theory, it is never proper for nurses to care for a
patient who has refused this care; however, there are instances where this could be considered appropriate. This is particularly true when the care task is crucial to the well-being and
comfort of the patient, and the nurse suspects that refusal stems from the patient misunderstanding the situation or from other extraneous reasons. For example, one nurse recounted how a
man patient initially refused catheterization because he thought that this was a long-term procedure and also that a female nurse was going to conduct the procedure. Once a male nurse
explained the process further and made it clear that he would perform the catheterization, the man approved. As this indicates, frequently patients require more information and they may also have
needs that they are reluctant to mention. While the nurses labeled this as sometimes "badgering" the patient, this subjective evaluation of providing more information, as this behavior can be defended
as ethically sound. Furthermore, there is considerable nursing literature on the topic of consent and mental health that suggests that failure to provide service when the reason for refusal is
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