Nursing Ethics

Words: 562
Pages: 3

The article by Doane, Pauly, and Brown & McPherson explores the nurse's involvement as a moral agent in healthcare. The authors admit that healthcare settings have guiding principles and codes of ethics for decision making. The authors enlighten that ethical decisions usually involve both emotion and reasoning. As a result, they require human involvement to understand and also apply them. The authors emphasize that nurses need to become humanly involved by bringing their hearts into ethics. However, this is an aspect that very few kinds of literature shed light on. The main challenge is that ethics is more of a personal process, hence making ethical decision-making process to be challenging when developing an educational approach to support …show more content…
A total of 87 nurses from various clinical settings including those working in long-term care, critical care, emergency care pediatrics, maternity, operation room, oncology, rehabilitation, medical surgery, psychiatry, community care and home care settings took part in this study.
The research also recruited participants from mid-sized organizations within the metropolitan areas mostly in western Canada. Before the research could commence, all the necessary approvals were obtained from the University research review committee, and the organizations are participating in the research.
The findings of the study revealed that being humanly involved in ethical nursing practice is mostly influenced by the nurses’ roles, the expectations, and the context. The struggles presented by student nurses are how to reconcile their personal self and their professional self to become competent. The main challenge faced by student nurses is the inconsistency existing between their perception of nurses versus the qualities they possess and