Medical Ethics
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Nurses Issue Call to Action on Moral Distress
The American Nurses Association has released “A Call to Action: Exploring Moral Resilience Toward a Culture of Ethical Practice,” which offers specific, practical guidance for nurses, leaders, and organizations.
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Companion Presence Affects Presurgical Conversations
Researchers expected that the visit would be more patient-centered due to companions acting as patient advocates. They found the opposite was true: Companions’ presence was associated with lower levels of patient-centeredness.
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Policy Takes Neutral Stance on Physician-assisted Suicide
In a new position statement, the American Academy of Neurology leaves the decision of whether to practice lawful physician-hastened death to “the conscientious judgment of its members acting on behalf of their adult patients dying of neurologic illness.”
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Clinical Ethics Consult ‘Needs to Be in the Chart’
A recent paper offers a suggested framework to ensure that clinical ethicists’ notes are included in the electronic health record.
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Certification Now Possible for Clinical Ethics Consultants: Applicants Are ‘Agents of Change’
The Healthcare Ethics Consultation Certification is the first program to identify and assess a national standard for healthcare ethics consultants.
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Barriers Exist to Family-centered ICU Care
New guidelines from the Society of Critical Care Medicine emphasize the benefits of family-centered care in the ICU.
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Study: Effects of Early Palliative Care Differ by Age, Gender
The effects of early palliative care differ depending on patients’ age and gender, found a recent study.
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Views on Disclosure of Donor-assisted Conception Are Evolving
Should parents inform their children that they were conceived by gamete or embryo donation? A position statement from the American Society for Reproductive Medicine examines the ethics of this issue.
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Physicians’ Mental Health ‘Finally Getting the Attention It Deserves’
Physician well-being is increasingly being recognized as an ethical issue, but mental health stigma remains an obstacle.
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Many Providers Say Spiritual Needs Should Be Assessed, But Few Do So
Should health professionals take a screening spiritual history of their patients? Most clinicians agreed they should, a recent survey found.