Foundations in Evidence Based
Practice
 Introduction to Ethics
Introduction to ethics
 Our care for patients should be based on sound judgement
(or evidence based practice!!)
 ..some of this judgement is about having a strong sense of
what is right or wrong
 ..having a strong sense of what we should be doing and
shouldn’t be doing as nurses
 ..having a strong sense of what our priorities ought to be
Introduction to ethics
 Nurses frequently have to make difficult decisions
for which there is not always a quick, easy or
‘correct’ answer
e.g. Can Mrs X be discharged yet? Can Mr Y manage
his own medications safely?
 Nevertheless, nurses still have to be able to
explain and account for these decisions and
actions
 The NMC Code can act as a guide
This can be seen as a ‘code of ethics’ – a set of
important principles to help guide nurses
Achievement of practice outcomes
includes consideration of ethical
issues
Domain 1 Professional and Ethical Practice
1.3 Demonstrate an awareness of, and apply ethical principles to,
nursing practice.
Outcomes:
 1.3.1 Demonstrate respect for patient and client confidentiality
 THIS OUTCOME IS ONLY ABOUT CONFIDENTIALITY. IT IS NOT
ABOUT HOW YOU RESPECT PATIENTS GENERALLY
 1.3.2 Identify ethical issues in day to day practice
What is an ‘ethical
issue’?
 When you have to judge what is right or wrong
 Choosing between options
 Deciding whether to do something or do nothing
 Should I or shouldn’t I?
 Weighing up the potential impact of your decisions or
actions
 A dilemma – making a difficult choice
Ethical issues in health
care
 We usually think of the ‘big’ issues
e.g. definition of life, what is a person, quality of life,
prolonging life, ending life, human rights.
 But day to day ethical issues can involve:
 Respecting people
 Treating people with dignity
 Treating people fairly
 Supporting patient’s choices
 These ‘principles’ are encompassed in the NMC code
 The code is a useful source of ethical principles in health care
Another source of ideas
in health care ethics
 Principles of Biomedical Ethics
(Beauchamp and Childress, 2001)
They discuss:
 4 key principles
 supplemented by 4 rules
4 Key Ethical Principles
 autonomy
 beneficence
 non-maleficence
 justice
Autonomy
 Respect a person’s right to make their own decisions
 Teach people to be able to make their own choices
 Support people in their individual choices
 Do not force or coerce people to do things
 ‘Informed Consent’ is an important outcome of this
principle
Beneficence (to do good)
 Our actions must aim to ‘benefit’ people – health, welfare, comfort,
well-being, improve a person’s potential, improve quality of life
 ‘Benefit’ should be defined by the person themselves. It’s not what
we think that is important.
 Act on behalf of ‘vulnerable’ people to protect their rights
 Prevent harm
 Create a safe and supportive environment
 Help people in crises
Non – maleficence (to do
no harm)
 do not to inflict harm on people
 do not cause pain or suffering
 do not incapacitate
 do not cause offence
 do not deprive people
 do not kill
 Both Beneficence and Non-maleficence underpin
EBP
Justice
 Treating people fairly
 Not favouring some individuals/groups over
others
 Acting in a non–discriminatory / non-prejudicial
way
 Respect for peoples rights
 Respect for the law
Justice
Distributive Justice – sharing the scarce resources in society in a
fair and just manner (e.g. health services, professional time)
 How should we share out healthcare resources?
 How do we share out our time with patients?
 Deciding how to do this raises some difficult questions
Patients should get…..
 an equal share ?
 just enough to meet their needs ?
 what they deserve ?
 what they can pay for ?
4 ethical rules
 Veracity – truth telling, informed consent,
respect for autonomy
 Privacy – a persons right to remain private, to not
disclose information
 Confidentiality – only sharing private
information on a ‘need to know basis’
 Fidelity – loyalty, maintaining the duty to care for
all no matter who they are or what they may have
done
Ethics
2 broad philosophical
theories
 1) consequentialism – taking the
consequences of our actions into
consideration
 2) deontology – basing our actions on a
set of principles or duties
Consequentialism
 Actions are right or wrong according to the
balance of their good and bad consequences
 the right act is the one that produces the best
overall result
 Utilitarianism (what action has the greatest utility
- use/benefit/positive outcome) is a type of
consequentialism
Utilitarianism
 most prominent consequence-based theory
 based on the principle of utility
 actions ought to produce the maximal balance of
positive value (e.g. happiness) over disvalue (e.g.
harm)
Deontology
 Duty or principle based theory
 An act is right if it conforms to an overriding moral duty
For example – do not tell lies, do not kill.
 E.g. Christian ethics – The Ten Commandments
But Christian ethics are not important for some people in
the world so moral duties vary between cultures and
societies
 A moral duty or principle is one that is:
 laid down by god / supremely rational being
 or is in accordance with reason / rationality
 or would be agreed by all rational beings
 The NMC Code of Conduct is a product of Deontological
ethics – it guides action based on a set of principles/duties.
References
Beauchamp T and Childress J (2001) Principles of Biomedical
Ethics 5th Edition Oxford University Press
Hunt G (1994) Ethical Issues in Nursing Routledge. London
Seedhouse D (1998) Ethics the heart of Health Care Wiley.
Winchester.
Watt H (2000) Life and Death in Health Care Ethics Routledge.
London
http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/ethics.htm#SH2a
http://www.nursingethics.ca/articles.html
http://www.freedomtocare.org/iane.htm
http://www.lib.flinders.edu.au/resources/sub/health
sci/a-zlist/ethics.html

informed consent overview about health care ethics

  • 1.
    Foundations in EvidenceBased Practice  Introduction to Ethics
  • 2.
    Introduction to ethics Our care for patients should be based on sound judgement (or evidence based practice!!)  ..some of this judgement is about having a strong sense of what is right or wrong  ..having a strong sense of what we should be doing and shouldn’t be doing as nurses  ..having a strong sense of what our priorities ought to be
  • 3.
    Introduction to ethics Nurses frequently have to make difficult decisions for which there is not always a quick, easy or ‘correct’ answer e.g. Can Mrs X be discharged yet? Can Mr Y manage his own medications safely?  Nevertheless, nurses still have to be able to explain and account for these decisions and actions  The NMC Code can act as a guide This can be seen as a ‘code of ethics’ – a set of important principles to help guide nurses
  • 4.
    Achievement of practiceoutcomes includes consideration of ethical issues Domain 1 Professional and Ethical Practice 1.3 Demonstrate an awareness of, and apply ethical principles to, nursing practice. Outcomes:  1.3.1 Demonstrate respect for patient and client confidentiality  THIS OUTCOME IS ONLY ABOUT CONFIDENTIALITY. IT IS NOT ABOUT HOW YOU RESPECT PATIENTS GENERALLY  1.3.2 Identify ethical issues in day to day practice
  • 5.
    What is an‘ethical issue’?  When you have to judge what is right or wrong  Choosing between options  Deciding whether to do something or do nothing  Should I or shouldn’t I?  Weighing up the potential impact of your decisions or actions  A dilemma – making a difficult choice
  • 6.
    Ethical issues inhealth care  We usually think of the ‘big’ issues e.g. definition of life, what is a person, quality of life, prolonging life, ending life, human rights.  But day to day ethical issues can involve:  Respecting people  Treating people with dignity  Treating people fairly  Supporting patient’s choices  These ‘principles’ are encompassed in the NMC code  The code is a useful source of ethical principles in health care
  • 7.
    Another source ofideas in health care ethics  Principles of Biomedical Ethics (Beauchamp and Childress, 2001) They discuss:  4 key principles  supplemented by 4 rules
  • 8.
    4 Key EthicalPrinciples  autonomy  beneficence  non-maleficence  justice
  • 9.
    Autonomy  Respect aperson’s right to make their own decisions  Teach people to be able to make their own choices  Support people in their individual choices  Do not force or coerce people to do things  ‘Informed Consent’ is an important outcome of this principle
  • 10.
    Beneficence (to dogood)  Our actions must aim to ‘benefit’ people – health, welfare, comfort, well-being, improve a person’s potential, improve quality of life  ‘Benefit’ should be defined by the person themselves. It’s not what we think that is important.  Act on behalf of ‘vulnerable’ people to protect their rights  Prevent harm  Create a safe and supportive environment  Help people in crises
  • 11.
    Non – maleficence(to do no harm)  do not to inflict harm on people  do not cause pain or suffering  do not incapacitate  do not cause offence  do not deprive people  do not kill  Both Beneficence and Non-maleficence underpin EBP
  • 12.
    Justice  Treating peoplefairly  Not favouring some individuals/groups over others  Acting in a non–discriminatory / non-prejudicial way  Respect for peoples rights  Respect for the law
  • 13.
    Justice Distributive Justice –sharing the scarce resources in society in a fair and just manner (e.g. health services, professional time)  How should we share out healthcare resources?  How do we share out our time with patients?  Deciding how to do this raises some difficult questions Patients should get…..  an equal share ?  just enough to meet their needs ?  what they deserve ?  what they can pay for ?
  • 14.
    4 ethical rules Veracity – truth telling, informed consent, respect for autonomy  Privacy – a persons right to remain private, to not disclose information  Confidentiality – only sharing private information on a ‘need to know basis’  Fidelity – loyalty, maintaining the duty to care for all no matter who they are or what they may have done
  • 15.
    Ethics 2 broad philosophical theories 1) consequentialism – taking the consequences of our actions into consideration  2) deontology – basing our actions on a set of principles or duties
  • 16.
    Consequentialism  Actions areright or wrong according to the balance of their good and bad consequences  the right act is the one that produces the best overall result  Utilitarianism (what action has the greatest utility - use/benefit/positive outcome) is a type of consequentialism
  • 17.
    Utilitarianism  most prominentconsequence-based theory  based on the principle of utility  actions ought to produce the maximal balance of positive value (e.g. happiness) over disvalue (e.g. harm)
  • 18.
    Deontology  Duty orprinciple based theory  An act is right if it conforms to an overriding moral duty For example – do not tell lies, do not kill.  E.g. Christian ethics – The Ten Commandments But Christian ethics are not important for some people in the world so moral duties vary between cultures and societies  A moral duty or principle is one that is:  laid down by god / supremely rational being  or is in accordance with reason / rationality  or would be agreed by all rational beings  The NMC Code of Conduct is a product of Deontological ethics – it guides action based on a set of principles/duties.
  • 19.
    References Beauchamp T andChildress J (2001) Principles of Biomedical Ethics 5th Edition Oxford University Press Hunt G (1994) Ethical Issues in Nursing Routledge. London Seedhouse D (1998) Ethics the heart of Health Care Wiley. Winchester. Watt H (2000) Life and Death in Health Care Ethics Routledge. London http://www.iep.utm.edu/e/ethics.htm#SH2a http://www.nursingethics.ca/articles.html http://www.freedomtocare.org/iane.htm http://www.lib.flinders.edu.au/resources/sub/health sci/a-zlist/ethics.html