Clinical Judgment
Ethical Theories
Bioethical Principles
Ethical Dilemmas & Moral Distress
Critical Thinking
100

This NCLEX-based model includes recognizing cues, analyzing cues, acting, and evaluating outcomes.

What is the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Model?

100

This ethical model determines rightness based on outcomes and the greatest good for the majority.

What is utilitarianism (goal-based ethics)?

100

This principle refers to a patient’s right to make informed decisions about their care.

What is autonomy?

100

This occurs when a nurse is unsure which moral principles apply to a situation.

What is moral uncertainty?

100

This type of thinking is systematic, purposeful, and reflective.

What is critical thinking?

200

This step involves noticing abnormal findings and relevant patient data.

What is recognizing cues?

200

This model emphasizes moral duty and respect for human dignity, regardless of outcomes.

What is deontological (duty-based) ethics?*

200

 The ethical obligation to act in the patient’s best interest.

What is beneficence?

200

A situation with two or more equally “right” but conflicting moral choices.

What is an ethical (moral) dilemma?

200

Expert nurses differ from novices because they organize data and constantly reassess patient status.

What is non-linear thinking?

300

This phase requires comparing cues, identifying patterns, and determining meaning.

What is analyzing cues?

300

 This ethical approach focuses on protecting individual patient rights, such as refusing treatment.

What is the rights-based (human rights) model?*

300

Avoiding actions that cause harm to the patient reflects this principle.

What is nonmaleficence?

300

Knowing the right action but being unable to act due to institutional or legal constraints

What is moral distress?

300

Automatically assuming there is only one right answer is a barrier to this process.

What is critical thinking?

400

This step involves selecting nursing interventions based on prioritized hypotheses.

What is taking action (or generating solutions and acting)?

400

Mandatory isolation of a patient with tuberculosis to protect the community reflects this ethical theory.

What is utilitarian ethics?

400

This principle focuses on fairness and equitable distribution of healthcare resources.

What is justice?

400

Resuscitating a dying patient without a DNR order despite believing it causes suffering is an example of this.

What is moral distress?

400

Mental discomfort caused by holding conflicting values simultaneously.

What is cognitive dissonance?

500

This characteristic of a critical thinker involves reflecting on one’s decisions to improve future care.

What is self-reflection?

500

This theory often has religious or moral foundations and includes the duty to “do no harm.”

What is deontological ethics?

500

Truth-telling that builds trust in the nurse–patient relationship reflects this principle.

What is veracity?

500

End-of-life care decisions most commonly trigger ethical dilemmas in nursing.

What are beginning- and end-of-life issues?

500

This attitude is essential for developing higher levels of critical thinking.

What is openness to new learning (or inquiry)?

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