Citation: Silva, Mary Cipriano and Ludwick, Ruth (July 2, 1999). Interstate Nursing Practice and Regulation: Ethical Issues for the 21st Century. Online Journal of Issues in Nursing Vol. 4 No. ... The second principle, beneficence, is at the heart of everyday nursing practice.
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Beneficence is certainly not limited to the nursing profession. Concern for the patient's best interest motivates all of medical care. In the medical model, action is usually taken quickly to minimize the possibility of any further harm.
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A Dictionary of Nursing. Oxford University Press. 2008. Retrieved November 22, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O62-beneficence. ...
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BioInfoBank Library :: Reconciling quality of life and beneficence in nursing practice: chronic dobutamine infusion in endstage heart failure--a case study. Psychosocial variables and hospitalization in persons with chronic heart failure. ... Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis, USA.
lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:7759276
Moral principles of autonomy, nonmaleficence, beneficence, justice, fidelity, veracity. ... Value neutrality and its relationship to nursing ... Nursing 205 Homepage...
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beneficence in nursing james in a nursing home for his safety and health the major biomedical principles that appear in conflict with one another are beneficence and autonomy. ... beneficence in nursing related links...
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3. The Principle of Beneficence: Illustrative Cases ... One clear example exists in health care where the principle of beneficence is given priority over the principle of respect for patient autonomy. This example comes from Emergency Medicine.
depts.washington.edu/bioethx/tools/prin3cs.html
Nurses frequently have to make decisions which require moral judgements, influenced by the ethical standards expected of the profession. They have a duty of care, promoting good, and minimising harm, whilst acting in the patients' best interests. ... Ethics, Nursing ... Philosophy, Nursing...
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These traits in the context of a tolerant society are not 'harmful' and are more a question of to what extent beneficence supports these uses of PGD...
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When a nurse respects the cultural practices of a patient and makes an effort to incorporate ethnic folk remedies with western medical practices, this is also an act of beneficence. Nursing is among the professions that require the greatest degree of beneficence to be successful.
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