What I learned Today
Legal Principles
Guides to the Nursing Profession & Patient Care
Ethics
Nursing Ethics
100

This is completed when there is deviation from the standard of care such as when a client falls or medication error occurs.

What is an event report?

100

This is a document that provides instructions about a clients wishes in certain situations such as withholding or withdrawing life-sustaining procedures in those who are terminally ill.

What is a living will?

100

As part of their right to refuse treatment, patients may prepare advance directives specifying what lifesaving treatments they do or do not wish to receive.  When determining the legality of an advance directive, what applicable laws should the nurse know? 

What is - State Laws?

100

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?

100

What is the name of the document prepared by the ANA that describe behaviors nurses must adhere to.

What is the - ANA Code of Ethics?

200

Name at least 2 important rules when filing an incident report:

Describe the facts only; no opinion statements, do NOT write in the chart that an incident report was filed; include who was involved & what happened, any witnesses

200

This limits the liability and offers legal immunity if a nurse helps at the scene of an accident.

What is the Good Samaritan Law?

200

What is the legal document that informs nurses what they may and may not do?

What is - State Nurse Practice Act?

200

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? 

200

This refers to taking positive actions to help other. Encourages you to do go for the client.

What is - Beneficence?

300

These are considered to be preventable errors, which may include falls, catheter associated UTI's, and healthcare associated pressure injuries.

What are Never Events?

300

This may occur when the nurse restrains a patient either chemically or physically without following hospital policy or procedure.

What is false imprisonment?
300

What is the document prepared by our nursing professional organization which describes the 'who, when, & where' of nursing practice?

What is ANA's Scope & Standards of Practice?

300

What is the ethical term for telling the truth to your patients?

veracity

300

What is the ethical term that means "do no harm" to our patients?

What is - Nonmaleficence?

400

Only covers a nurse while on duty.

What is Malpractice Insurance?

400

This is conduct which falls below the generally accepted standard of care that a reasonably prudent person would provide under similar circumstances. 

What is Negligence?

400

According to Maslow, which should the nurse do first if all are needed:

Toilet the patient

Administer a sleeping pill

Change the temp in the room

Apply oxygen

What is - Apply Oxygen

400

What is the ethical term for upholding any promises you make to the patient?

fidelity

(Remember Semper Fi - always faithful)

400
Duty when given a morally conflicting patient assignment.

What is - ask for reassignment?

500

What department gets an Event Report once it has been filed?

What is Risk Management?

500

Elements of what?

The patient/plaintiff must prove the following:

1. There was a provider-patient relationship between the nurse and defendant.

2. The nurse breached the duty owed to the client under that relationship.

3. The client's injury was due to the nurse's breach in duty.

4. The client has accrued damages due to the injury.

What are the elements of malpractice?

500

What is the term used to describe practicing nursing in such a way that incorporates the latest research, patient preferences, and clinical experience?

What is - Evidence Based research or evidence-based practice

500

What is the ethical term used to describe patients' rights to make their own decisions about their health care or even refuse care?

autonomy

500

The nurse-patient relationship is initiated when the nurse does what?

What is - Accepts a patient assignment?

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