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- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Coercing the patient to participate for the benefit of science.
- Providing only positive information about the drug.
- Explaining the study purpose, risks, benefits, alternatives, and right to withdraw without penalty, ensuring understanding.
- Minimizing the risks to encourage participation.
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Confidentiality
- Justice
- Deontology
- Utilitarianism
- Principlism
- Virtue Ethics
- Keep it, as it was clearly forgotten.
- Distribute it among the nursing staff.
- Report the finding to the hospital administration and follow established procedures for lost and found items.
- Donate it to a charity.
- Parental autonomy
- Justice
- Beneficence (to the child)
- Veracity
- Provide anonymized information.
- Decline the offer and uphold patient confidentiality.
- Negotiate a higher fee.
- Refer the journalist to the hospital administration.
- Non-maleficence
- Justice
- Autonomy
- Veracity
- Remain silent and let the physician handle it.
- Take over the conversation and simplify the terms.
- Clarify information for the patient using simpler language, assess their understanding, and offer emotional support after the physician's departure.
- Advise the patient to seek a second opinion.
- Fidelity to employer
- Patient advocacy
- Professional duty
- Personal autonomy
- Beneficence
- Fidelity
- Non-maleficence
- Autonomy
- Continue using the faulty equipment until it is replaced.
- Refuse to work with the faulty equipment.
- Document the equipment issue and take all possible precautions to mitigate risk while advocating for its repair or replacement.
- Warn patients about the faulty equipment.
- Support the family's indefinite wishes without question.
- Encourage the family to immediately withdraw support.
- Provide compassionate support, educate the family about brain death, and facilitate discussions between the family and the medical team regarding end-of-life options and resource implications.
- Leave the family alone to grieve.
- Decline the request and explain personal beliefs.
- Pray with the patient despite discomfort to build rapport.
- Graciously decline while offering to find spiritual support services if available.
- Tell the patient that praying is not part of nursing duties.
- Persuade the patient until they agree to the surgery.
- Respect the patient's autonomous decision.
- Seek a court order to compel the surgery.
- Administer a sedative to reduce the patient's fear.
- Accept the denial and drop the issue.
- Inform the patient whose record was accessed.
- Report the suspected unauthorized access to patient records to the appropriate hospital authority.
- Warn the colleague that they will be watched.
- Beneficence
- Non-maleficence
- Autonomy
- Justice
- Autonomy
- Beneficence
- Justice
- Non-maleficence
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