Relacionar Columnas Foundations Of Nursing: Legal and Ethical Guidelines QuizVersión en línea Match the principal to the example por Lisa Schilling-Kauten 1 Informed Consent 2 Assault 3 Malpractice: Unintentional Tort 4 Veracity 5 False imprisonment 6 Advanced Directive 7 Fidelity 8 Battery: Intentional Tort 9 Client Abandonment 10 Beneficence 11 Justice 12 Nonmaleficence 13 Autonomy 14 Good Samaritan Act 15 Confidentiality Example: The nurse only shares information about the client, either verbal or written, with those who are responsible for implementing the client’s treatment plan. Example: Confining a client to a specific area either physically, verbally, or by using a chemical restraint when it is not part of the clients treatment. Example: The nurse administers an IM injection to a client of sound mind and judgment after the client had already refused the medication. Example: The nurse failed to notify the primary care provider of significant decelerations in a fetal heart rate. As a result, the child was born with a brain injury. Example: The nurse holds the flu shot (does not give), on a client who previously had a serious life-threatening reaction to the vaccine. Example: Although the nurse accepts the client assignment they feel is unsafe, the nurse reports their concern in writing to the supervisor. Example: A client asks a nurse to be present when they talk to their guardian for the first time in a year. The nurse remains with the client during this interaction. Example: While driving to work, a nurse stops to provide aid to those involved in a motor vehicle crash. The nurse knows he must obtain consent to help the pedestrians, work within his scope and as another reasonably prudent nurse would function and can not leave the scene until he can transfer care appropriately. Example: The nurse tells the client, "If you bite me, I'll bite you right back!" Example: During a treatment team meeting, a nurse leads a discussion regarding whether or not two clients who broke the same facility rule were treated equally. Example: Rather than giving advice to a client who has difficulty making decisions, a nurse helps the client explore all alternatives and arrive at a choice. Example: A legal document what states a competent individuals wishes in the event they become incapacitated. Nurses must ask a client if they have one, would like information about them and document if the client has one. Example: A client states, “You and that other staff member were talking about me, weren’t you?” The nurse truthfully replies, “We were discussing ways to help you relate to the other clients in a more positive way.” Example: A nurse helps a newly admitted client who has a psychotic disorder to feel safe in the environment of the mental health facility. Example: Prior to "putting the client under anesthesia," the anesthesiologist provides full disclosure over the risks and benefits of conscious sedation.