Values, Rights, and Ethics
Patient Rights and Partnerships
Ethical Decision-Making
Practice Acts and Commitment
Liability and Legal Responsibilities
100

These are personal beliefs and ideas about what is important, desirable, or worthwhile.

Values

100

Formerly known as the Patient’s Bill of Rights, this document explains what patients should expect during a hospital stay.

The Patient Care Partnership

100

The first step in ethical decision-making is to clearly identify this.

Ethical problem or dilemma

100

This state law defines nursing licensure requirements, permitted titles, standards of conduct, and scope of practice.

Nurse practice act

100

Failure to act with the level of care that a reasonably careful person would use under similar circumstances is called this.

Negligence

200

These are legally or morally protected claims that allow individuals to make choices and receive fair treatment.

Rights

200

The primary purpose of the Patient Care Partnership is to promote communication, understanding, and cooperation between patients and these individuals.

Health care providers and hospital staff

200

After identifying the ethical problem, the health care provider should collect relevant clinical, legal, cultural, and personal information. This is known as doing what?

Gathering the facts

200

Practice acts protect patients by establishing the minimum standards needed for this type of professional care.

Safe and competent care

200

This form of professional negligence occurs when a licensed health care provider fails to meet accepted professional standards and causes patient harm.

Malpractice

300

This discipline examines principles of right and wrong conduct and guides professional decision-making.

Ethics

300

Under the Patient Care Partnership, patients should receive care delivered with skill, compassion, dignity, and this quality.

Respect

300

The third step involves determining which personal values, professional standards, and ethical principles apply to the situation.

Identifying the relevant values and ethical principles

300

A nurse who performs a procedure that is not permitted by the state nurse practice act may be practicing outside this legally defined boundary.

The scope of practice

300

Failure to observe a suicidal patient as ordered, improper use of restraints, medication errors, and breaches of confidentiality are examples of these.

Areas of potential legal liability

400

A nurse personally opposes a patient’s decision but continues to provide respectful, unbiased care. This demonstrates the ability to separate personal values from these standards.

Professional ethics

400

Before agreeing to a procedure, a patient has the right to receive understandable information about its purpose, risks, benefits, and alternatives. This process is called what?

Informed consent

400

Developing possible courses of action and predicting the benefits and risks of each represents these two ethical decision-making steps.

Considering alternatives and examining their consequences

400

This legal process permits psychiatric evaluation or treatment without the person’s consent when statutory criteria are met.

Involuntary psychiatric commitment

400

Accurately recording assessments, interventions, medications, patient responses, and communications fulfills this major legal responsibility.

Complete and accurate documentation

500

Autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, fidelity, and veracity are examples of these guides to professional conduct.

Ethical principles

500

The Patient Care Partnership supports a patient’s legal and ethical ability to accept or do this to a recommended treatment.

Refuse treatment

500

After selecting and carrying out the best course of action, the final step is to determine whether the decision produced an ethical and effective result.

Evaluating the outcome

500

In many jurisdictions, involuntary commitment begins with an emergency evaluation or temporary hold, followed by clinical assessment and, when continued confinement is requested, this legal safeguard.

Court hearing or judicial review

500

Maintaining confidentiality, obtaining informed consent, and reporting suspected abuse or credible threats are three examples of these professional obligations.

Legal responsibilities of nurses and health care providers