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  1. Normative Ethics is focused on the creation of theories that provide general moral rules governing our behavior, such as Utilitarianism or Kantian Ethics. The normative ethicist, rather than being a football player, is more like a referee who sets up the rules governing how the game is played. Metaethics is the study of how we engage in ethics.

    • Mark Dimmock, Andrew Fisher
    • 2017
  2. Apr 11, 2019 · Volume 27, Issue 1. https://doi.org/10.1177/0969733019836148. Contents. PDF / ePub. More. Abstract. We describe the results and implications of a literature review that identifies the number of normative and empirical articles, respectively, that have appeared in Nursing Ethics in each year from 1994 to 2017.

    • Eric Vogelstein, Alison Colbert
    • 2020
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    ‘Ethical theory should positively endorse deliberation involving sympathy and direct attendance to concrete particulars’ – This claim suggests a requirement fulfilled by most ethical perspectives with potential application to care practices. It seems unimaginable that an ethical theory could be worthy of consideration that accommodated unsympatheti...

    ‘To the extent that they have value to the individuals involved, relationships ought to be (a) treated as moral paradigms,Footnote 1 (b) valued, preserved or promoted (as appropriate to the circumstance at hand) and (c) acknowledged as giving rise to weighty duties’Footnote 2 – The relational focus of care ethics is different to most other ethical ...

    ‘Care ethics sometimes call for agents to have caring attitudes, that is, attitudes that: (i) have as their object something that has interests, or something that might affect something that has interests; and that (ii) are a positive response (e.g. promoting, respecting, revering) to those interests; and that (iii) lead the agent’s affects, desire...

    ‘Care ethics calls for agents to perform actions (i) that are performed under the (perhaps tacit) intention of fulfilling (or going some way to fulfilling) interest/s that the agent perceives some moral person (the recipient) to have; (ii) where the strength of the demand is a complex function of the value of the intention, the likelihood that the ...

    • Ann Gallagher
    • a.gallagher@surrey.ac.uk
    • 2017
  4. foundational knowledge of clinical ethics, including prevailing ethical views and laws related to confiden-tiality, informed consent, truth-telling and deception, the right to refuse treatment, parental autonomy, decisional capacity, and surrogate decision-making.

  5. Focuses on the ethical dimension of live, contemporary issues in nursing care. Offers detailed vignettes from a real patient/nursing context or practice-based research study. Discusses the key ethical issues and potential approaches.

  6. Think about ways to apply ethics to the personal domain of nursing practice, education, research, management, leadership or policy development. • Discuss the . Code. with co-workers and others. • Use a specific example from experience to identify ethical dilemmas and standards of conduct as outlined in the . Code. Identify ways in which the ...

  7. Mar 9, 2017 · First Online: 09 March 2017. pp 1–13. Cite this chapter. Download book PDF. Download book EPUB. Key Concepts and Issues in Nursing Ethics. P. Anne Scott. 8491 Accesses. 3 Citations. Abstract. Nurses are important to patients. Nurses touch people’s lives during some of the peaks and troughs of human existence.

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