What is the name of the document prepared by the ANA that describe behaviors nurses must adhere to:
ANA Code of Ethics
This refers to being fair.
What is justice?
Duty Based Ethics
What is DEONTOLOGY?
Cheating on a test or "flying under the radar" during clinical lab time not only robs you of the opportunity to be a better nurse, it also violates what?
What is the Nursing Code of Ethics?
Blood Glucose testing is one example of what kind of Informatics used in Nursing?
What is Point of Care testing?
as the failure of a professional person to act in accordance with the prevailing professional standards, or failure to foresee consequences that a professional person, having the necessary skills and education, should foresee.
What is Malpractice?
This refers to taking positive actions to help other. Encourages you to do go for the client.
What is beneficence?
Ethical Theory Based on Individual Rights over the greater good.
What is Right-Based Theory?
Genetic testing and editing, Cloning, Stem Cell Research, and End of Life care are all examples of what are of study?
What is BIOETHICS?
The Ability to recognize when information is needed and how it is produced and the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively use the needed information to create new knowledge is called?
What is Information Literacy?
What is the ethical term for telling the truth to your patients?
veracity
What is the ethical term that means "do no harm" to our patients?
nonmaleficence
The Ends Justify the Means
What is Utilitarianism / Outcome-Based Theory?
What is the term used for anguish that health care professionals experience when their basic beliefs or what is right and wrong or ethical principles are challenged?
What is Moral Distress?
A celebrity is on your floor for a routine procedure, a colonoscopy. The TV station, the patient's girlfriend, the patient's manager, and the nurse in the endoscopy suite have all called to see if the patient is there. Who is it OK to tell that the patient is there?
What is only those who are involved is this patients' care, the nurse in the endoscopy suite?
What is the ethical term for upholding any promises you make to the patient?
fidelity
(Remember Semper Fi - always faithful)
This exists when the right thing to do is not clear, when team members can't agree on the right thing to do, or when the team and patient/family disagrees with the plan of care.
What is an ethical dilemma?
The theory based on the ideal that every person has the same access to care and procedures, without respect of position or wealth.
What is Justice-Based Theory?
Standards of moral conduct in a society.
Allows patient information to be rapidly and readily available. Aids in providing a diagnosis and treatment plan for patients. It helps to reduce medication errors. It aids in educating patients. What is it?
What is Information Technology (E-Mars, EMRE/EHR, POC, etc)?
What is the ethical term used to describe patients' rights to make their own decisions about their health care or even refuse care?
autonomy
When you limit the sharing of patient information in respect for the patient and the building of a trusting relationship, you are honoring what ethical principle?
What is Confidentiality?
Theory that looks at NURSING as a Calling and not a means to become rich.
What is Virtue-Based Ethical Theory?
A nurse mistakenly gives the wrong medication to a patient. They call their supervisor and the attending provider to advise them. This is an example of what ethical principle?
What is Accountability?
What was this Japanese TV series that first aired in the late 1960's and became one of the highest grossing media franchises of all time?
What was ULTRAMAN?