NURS 8000 Week 5: Ethical Issues Relevant to the Doctorally Prepared Nurse

NURS 8000 Week 5: Ethical Issues Relevant to the Doctorally Prepared Nurse

NURS 8000 Week 5: Ethical Issues Relevant to the Doctorally Prepared Nurse

            Nurses at all levels of practice and care will encounter ethical issues. It is important for a DNP-prepared nurse to be aware of significant ethical issues they may encounter. DNP-prepared nurses “are on the frontline of patient care as ethical leaders and advocates” (Vermeesch et al., 2018). This means that DNP-prepared nurses not only need to be aware of ethical issues they may encounter, but also understand how their role impacts the resolution of ethical issues. As a DNP-prepared nurse, we will be the ones other nurses and medical professionals look to in a variety of ethical situations. For this discussion post, I focus on two significant ethical issues: collaboration between health care providers and patient’s families during critical illness and patients with reduced consciousness.

Initiating and collaborating communication between health care providers and family members during times of critical illness can be an ethical challenge. Sometimes this communication is not intiatied until late in the patient’s disease progression, and this can be an issue. The families might not understand the severity of the patient’s illness and be unable to make health care decisions. By involving the family members early on, the nurse may alleviate some of the misunderstanding. According to Pavlish et al. (2020), “families not only benefit from family conferences but also value the opportunity, especially if provided time to share their perspectives.” Initiating the family’s involvement early on can help reduce ethical predicaments that may arise.

            Patients with reduced consciousness, whether they are under sedation or not, is an ethical concern. A patient may arrive to a emergency room or medical unit unconscious, with no identification or family present, and the health care providers must make decisions based on what they believe is best for the patient. This can become an ethical issue because since the patient has altered consciousness, the health care team does not know that patient’s health care wishes. “Patients with reduced consciousness are vulnerable and completely dependent on the care and concerns of others” (Rejno et al., 2020). This can be a tricky ethical situation for a nurse to navigate.

            There are many times patients are unable to sign consent for surgical procedures and their families or legally authorized persons are not available. Sometimes there is conflict on which family member should be informed or make decisions for the patient when they are unable to provide consent. Oftentimes there is confusion because the nurse on the unit taking care of the patient does not know who to contact, and when the patient arrives to the surgical unit, it becomes even more confusing. This causes delays with care and brings up ethical concerns.

            In the postanesthesia care unit (PACU), patients have received anesthesia and other sedatives and may be unable to make decisions or express their needs. This means the PACU nurse must maintain the patient’s dignity as best as they can. Although a patient will wake up form the anesthesia, they are still in a vulnerable state, since the anesthesia medication can affect their judgment and decision-making skills for up to 24 hours. It is up to the PACU nurse to provide safe care and also help the patient make decisions.

References

Pavlish, C. L., Henriksen, J., Brown-Saltzman, K., Robinson, E. M., Warda, U. S., Farra, C., Chen, B., &Jakel, P. (2020). A team-based early action protocol to address ethical concerns in the intensive care unit. American Journal of Critical Care, 29(1), 49-61. https://doi.org/10.4037/ajcc2020915

Rejno, A., Ternestedt, B.-M., Nordenfelt, L., Silfverberg, G., &Godskesen, T. E. (2020). Dignity at stake: Caring for persons with impaired autonomy. Nursing Ethics, 27(1), 104-115. https://doi/org/10.1177/0969733019845128 Vermeesch, A., Cox, P. H., Baca, S., & Simmons, D. (2018). Strategies for strengthening ethics education in a DNP program. Nursing Education Perspectives, 39(5), 309-311. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.NEP.0000000000000383

Ethical conflicts complicate clinical practice and often compromise communication and teamwork among patients, families, and clinicians. As ethical conflicts escalate, patient and family distress and dissatisfaction with care increase and trust in clinicians erodes, reducing care quality and patient safety. Ethical conflicts can emerge from intractable treatment disagreements or when patients, surrogates, or clinicians perceive their goals related to care and outcomes are being thwarted by the incompatible goals of others. The primary ethical conflicts perceived in the ICU relate to medical decision-making and treatment goals, especially regarding the benefit or harm of aggressive treatment. (Pavlish, 2020). In the article by Pavlish (2020), it states that delaying or avoiding conversations about prognosis and treatment options appears to increase the probability of continuing aggressive and sometimes unwanted treatments for patients with serious and life-limiting conditions. For example, patients with heart failure are often not referred for palliative care services until the last month of life because advanced care planning is frequently delayed. Other researchers found that Medicare recipients with cancer received high-intensity treatments relative to their poor prognosis in the last weeks of life. Providing intensive therapies may certainly be indicated in some cases; however, when patients know that medical interventions are not likely to improve their condition, they often refuse or decrease intense measures (Pavlish, 2020). When a person can no longer communicate their needs and will, the healthcare professionals involved need to know how to respect their dignity in daily care. Many healthcare professionals have asked for more knowledge and training about dignity ing the care of older persons (Rejno et al., 2020). The American Nurses Association (2015) Code of Ethics is fundamental to providing a framework for ethical decision-making and guiding practice. Advanced practice registered nurses, specifically nurse practitioners with doctor of nursing practice degrees, are on the frontline of patient care as ethical leaders and advocates (Vermeesch et al., 2018). Throughout my nursing career, I have experienced many ethical challenges. One that comes to mind is a patient who was considered to have no brain activity. The family did not want to have him taken off of life support. They had a well-known acupuncturist come and perform treatment on the patient. It was sad to watch the family hand on this way. After a week or so, the family decided to have the patient taken off of life support. As a DNP-prepared nurse, I expect to face families who are not ready to let go of their loved ones. I also expect patients who would want to try alternative therapies over pharmaceutical treatment, when the latter would be a better treatment. 

References

Pavlish, C. L. (2020). A Team-Based Early Action Protocol to Address Ethical Concerns in the Intensive Care Unit. American Journal of Critical Care29(1), 49–58. https://doi-org.ezp.waldenulibrary.org/10.4037/ajcc2020915

Rejnö Å, Ternestedt B-M, Nordenfelt L, Silfverberg G, Godskesen TE. Dignity at stake: Caring for persons with impaired autonomy. Nursing Ethics. 2020;27(1):104-115. doi:10.1177/0969733019845128

Vermeesch, A., Cox, P. H., Baca, S., & Simmons, D. (2018). Strategies for strengthening ethics education in a DNP program. Nursing Education Perspectives, 39(5), 309-311. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.NEP.0000000000000383