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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. There is a reason why nurses must wait for and abide by doctors' orders when it comes to the administration of medications; to ignore the chart's state dosage, the nurse compromises the fundamental basis of ethics that provides the foundation upon which medical professionals operate. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCNursViol.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that provides the foundation upon which medical professionals operate. The extent to which this nurse violated a number of ethical principles is both grand and far-reaching; that she may
have been doing it out of a perceived benefit to the patient or because she did not want to deal with his agitation speaks to reasons that do not justify
her actions. Acting of her own accord, the nurse assumed a position of autonomy that precluded any authority or input the doctor is supposed to have when it comes to
the hierarchy of patient care. The patient had just been moved into that unit, so the nurse could not have known about any underlying circumstances that prompted the doctor
to prescribe the dosage he did; to take it upon herself to increase the amount of both drugs reflected a blatant disregard for the chain of command so critical in
patient care. Moreover, her self-empowered autonomy was indicative of disrespect toward the person she was placed in charge to protect from further harm; instead of defer to this individuals
personhood, she wholly disregarded what his physician considered to be the best approach for that particular moment. The nurses breach of nonmalefience clearly illustrates how she ignored the potential for
causing harm when she increased the patients drugs; only after the medication had been administered did she consider this possibility when she noted that no adverse effected was observed.
What if there had been a detrimental reaction to her arbitrary decision? Would she have been equipped to address the situation so the patient would not suffer further consequences
of her actions? Did she stop to think there was a valid reason behind the limited dosage the doctor prescribed to which she was not privy? Clearly, there was
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