Dr Nick

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About Dr Nick

Levels Tought:
Elementary,Middle School,High School,College,University,PHD

Expertise:
Art & Design,Computer Science See all
Art & Design,Computer Science,Engineering,Information Systems,Programming Hide all
Teaching Since: May 2017
Last Sign in: 339 Weeks Ago, 5 Days Ago
Questions Answered: 19234
Tutorials Posted: 19224

Education

  • MBA (IT), PHD
    Kaplan University
    Apr-2009 - Mar-2014

Experience

  • Professor
    University of Santo Tomas
    Aug-2006 - Present

Category > Environmental science Posted 26 Oct 2017 My Price 13.00

Healthcare Due in 2Hours

 

Read:

Basic Principles of Medical Ethics

(http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/medical-ethics-for-dummies-cheat-sheet.html)

There are four basic principles of medical ethics. Each addresses a value that arises in interactions between providers and patients. The principles address the issue of fairness, honesty, and respect for fellow human beings.

  • Autonomy: People have the right to control what happens to their bodies. This principle simply means that an informed, competent adult patient can refuse or accept treatments, drugs, and surgeries according to their wishes. People have the right to control what happens to their bodies because they are free and rational. And these decisions must be respected by everyone, even if those decisions aren’t in the best interest of the patient.
  • Beneficence: “do only good”: All healthcare providers must strive to improve their patient’s health, to do the most good for the patient in every situation. But what is good for one patient may not be good for another, so each situation should be considered individually. And other values that might conflict with beneficence may need to be considered.
  • Nonmaleficence: “First, do no harm” is the bedrock of medical ethics. In every situation, healthcare providers should avoid causing harm to their patients. You should also be aware of the doctrine of double effect, where a treatment intended for good unintentionally causes harm. This doctrine helps you make difficult decisions about whether actions with double effects can be undertaken.
  • Justice: The fourth principle demands that you should try to be as fair as possible when offering treatments to patients and allocating scarce medical resources. You should be able to justify your actions in every situation.

Discussion Questions requiring your response: Respond thoughtfully to the following questions and provide one reference (cited in APA format at end of your initial thread/post) that you have found that covers the topic of the right to have autonomy in healthcare decisions.  You must then respond and comment in a meaningful manner to the post of at least two (2) other students.

  1. Which of these principles do you believe is most critical to assuring quality of life and care for the recipients of healthcare services?  WHY?
  2. Provide one example of a situation where two or more of these principles may actually conflict with each other.  (It can be a healthcare scenario or just an idea/analysis you provide).  Based on your response, also provide the “best case scenario” resolution - from your perspective.  Be sure to use a scholarly source that supports your thought process, assuring your response is not just an uneducated opinion but one that has real merit.

Answers

(4)
Status NEW Posted 26 Oct 2017 04:10 PM My Price 13.00

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