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Registered and enrolled nurses : experiences of ethical issues in nursing practice

journal contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by Megan-Jane JohnstoneMegan-Jane Johnstone, C Da Costa, S Turale
Research aims:
To explore and describe registered and enrolled nurses’ experiences of ethics and human rights issues in nursing practice in the Australian State of Victoria.

Method:
Descriptive survey of 398 Victorian nurses using the Ethical Issues Scale (EIS) survey questionnaire.

Major findings:
The most frequent and most disturbing ethical issues reported by the nurses surveyed included: protecting patients’ rights and human dignity, providing care with possible risk to their own health, informed consent, staffing patterns that limited patient access to nursing care, the use of physical/chemical restraints, prolonging the dying process with inappropriate measures, working with unethical/impaired colleagues, caring for patients/families who are misinformed, not considering a patient’s quality of life, poor working conditions.

Conclusions:
Nurses in Victoria frequently experience disturbing ethical issues in nursing practice that warrant focussed attention by health service managers, educators and policy makers.

History

Journal

Australian journal of advanced nursing

Volume

22

Issue

1

Pagination

31 - 37

Publisher

Australian Nursing Federation

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0813-0531

eISSN

1447-4328

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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