Professional Responsibility
Theories
Ethical Principles in health promotion
OTHER 1
OTHER 2
100
Aggressive action taken on behalf of an individual, or perhaps a group viewed as an individual entity, to protect or secure that individual's rights.
What is Advocacy
100
Theories that propose what humans ought to value.
What is Normative theories
100
Devotion to the truth.
What is Veracity?
100
Aims to forestall ethical problems before they develop
What is Preventatitive ethics
100
An idea a person holds to be true, which may influence how he or she lives.
What is Beliefs
200
An organization that represents and protects the profession of nursing in our nation
What is American Nurses Association (ANA)
200
Theories that depend more on adherence to duties than on good consequences.
What is Duty-Based Theories
200
A principle that enjoins people not to harm other people.
What is Nonmaleficience
200
Feminist thoughts and philosophies that present a viewpoint on moral problems in health care and other areas of life that has been neglected historically.
What is Feminist Ethics
200
Feelings and values related to right and wrong.
What is Morals?
300
Reliance on the integrity, strength, ability, surety, and so on, of a person or thing; confidence
What is Trust?
300
A perspective that holds that the consequences or intended consequences of actions matter. Therefore, from the consequentialist perspective, any decision making about intended actions or interventions must take into account all knowable potential consequences.
What is Consequentialist?
300
The right to determine what treatments or interventions one will accept.
What is autonomy?
300
A process of ensuring that a person has all of the appropriate information necessary to come to a decision about participation that facilitates autonomous action.
What is consent
300
Deliberate harm and harm caused by indifferent of incompetent decision-making.
What is Maleficience?
400
Examples of normative ethics in that they prescribe how members of a profession ought to act, given the goals and purposes of the profession related to individuals and society.
What is code of ethics?
400
Emerged out of a particular era and as a result of perceived injustices in societal arrangements in England during the turmoil of the industrial revolution. These theories have a tendency to privilege the good of the group over the needs of individuals.
What is Utilitarian Theories
400
The quality or state of doing or producing good.
What is Beneficience
400
Situations that present dilemmas involving right and wrong.
What is ethical issues
400
Concerned with discovering or proposing what is right or wrong, or good or bad, in human action toward other humans and other entities such as animals and the environment.
What is Moral Philosophy?
500
A status of maintaining privacy.
What is Confidentiality?
500
Ethics based on observations of human behavior over time and in a variety of settings. They are not directive—they merely tell us how people act toward each other and their environment, what they seem to believe are "good" or moral actions.
What is Descriptive Theories
500
Ethical principle that claims that equals should be treated equally and those who are unequal should be treated differently according to their differences.
What is Justice
500
Developed as a result of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). Its intent was to ensure that individuals' health information is properly protected, while allowing the flow of information needed to provide and promote high-quality care (including using client information for research) and to protect the public's health and well-being.
What is Privacy Rule
500
Counseling with a person or couple related to genetic screening. It can include assisting people to determine the risks and benefits of screening, to prepare for their future needs, and to help them with procreative planning
What is Genetic Counseling
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