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Chapter 4: Ethics in Community-Oriented Nursing Practice

Foundations of Nursing in the Community, 3rd Edition Stanhope, Lancaster

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Chapter 4: Ethics in Community-Oriented Nursing Practice

 

Complete Chapter Questions With Answers

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. Nursing’s first code of ethics was written in:
a. 1893 by Lystra Gretter
b. 1950 by the ANA House of Delegates
c. 1953 by the International Council of Nurses (ICN)
d. 2001 by the ANA House of Delegates

 

 

ANS:   A

The Nightingale Pledge, considered nursing’s first code of ethics, was written by Lystra Gretter in 1893.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Knowledge             REF:    p. 52

 

  1. A nurse didn’t know what to do when faced with a particular ethical dilemma because an option that would have a good outcome didn’t seem possible. The nurse finally decided to talk to the agency supervisor and let the supervisor decide what action to take. In terms of ethics, this approach would be considered:
a. Appropriate because the supervisor is responsible for the nurse’s choices
b. Intelligent because the supervisor has access to resource persons (clergy, physicians, administrators) who might know of options the nurse hadn’t considered
c. Simply an opportunity to discuss the issue because the nurse is still responsible for his or her own personal choices
d. Wise because the supervisor would be more knowledgeable concerning agency priorities and traditional practices

 

 

ANS:   C

Ethically, each nurse is responsible for his or her own decisions and cannot avoid ethical accountability by relying on obedience to a supervisor or any external rule or policy.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Application             REF:    p. 52

 

  1. What is the first and most crucial step in the ethical decision-making process?
a. Assess the context or environment in which the decision must be made.
b. Consider the various ethical principles or theories.
c. Identify the ethical concerns.
d. Make a decision and act on it.
e. Seek all relevant information.

 

 

ANS:   C

The first step in the ethical decision-making framework is to carefully identify the ethical issue or dilemma.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Application             REF:    p. 53 (Table 4-1)

 

  1. A nurse is asked to meet with a family who recently emigrated from Botswana (Africa). After the clinical doctor tells the husband the wife’s diagnosis of breast cancer, the family thanks the physician and starts to leave. Ethically, what is the nurse’s most important action?
a. Emphasizing that the family must set up a surgical appointment for the wife immediately
b. Assessing the family’s current living situation, including insurance and other assets
c. Educating the family concerning the usual treatment and the prognosis of breast cancer
d. Interviewing the family concerning their perspective of the threat to the family’s well-being
e. Stressing the seriousness of the diagnosis and the need to act immediately

 

 

ANS:   D

Any of the actions might be taken. However, America is a multicultural nation with diverse ethnic groups and diverse values. Before any intervention can be made, the health care professionals must understand the family’s cultural, psychological, social, communal, and environmental contexts, because these contexts affect the way issues are formulated and decisions are made. Consequently, it is crucial to interview the family to determine their understanding of the situation before deciding what, if any, intervention needs to be made. In many cultures the family, rather than the individual, is the unit of primary concern.

 

DIF:    Cognitive Level: Synthesis     REF:    p. 53 (Table 4-1)

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