Role Of Egoism In Nursing

Words: 665
Pages: 3

Ethical issues pertaining to the release of a patient from care while unstable. When considering ethics, which translates into what is a right or wrong action, there are multiple views, There is the emotivism, which concern actions taken based on feelings. Their is the Utilitarian view which concerns consequences of actions and acting in such a manner that will do good for the greatest amount of people, there are Deontological views, which offers no hierarchy of values, the views come from absolutism, and are acts are carried out through set principle laws. There is the Egoism view, which takes into account agreements involving societal contracts, and then there is Aristotle’s view, which are acts based on a person’s virtues. There are …show more content…
That includes involving, the patient, patient’s family, and the appropriate team of professionals, in which assist us in providing that care, i.e., nurse case managers, team leaders, doctors, respiratory therapist, and social services, to name a few. It is not only our duty but our moral responsibility to make sure, prior to a patient’s release, they are in a position to be safely discharged, where no harm will come to them as a result of their release, from our care. We must use ethical views to determine our actions. Each person depending on their personal believe of what ethics mean to them, will act accordingly, However, as professional nurses, we have to provide care with the highest degree of quality and …show more content…
Congress passed a law titled, “Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Law, EMTALA. The establishment of this law was originally intended to allow people access to treatment within an emergency department setting even if they lacked insurance or the financial capacity to pay for the treatment and to prevent said patients from being discharged or transferred purely for monetary reasons, while unstable. It has been referred to as the “anti-dumping” law. This law now applies to any type of treatment setting. It bars any medical care facility in the U.S. from transferring unstable patients from their treatment facility to another, and bars the discharge of unstable patients, based on a set of standardized regulations and guidelines pertaining to the meaning of