Unravelling The Dilemmas Within Everyday Nursing Practice
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Nursing Ethics
- Vol. 6 (4) , 287-298
- https://doi.org/10.1177/096973309900600404
Abstract
Each day, nurse practitioners are faced with clinical situations and dilemmas that have no obvious right answers. This article sets out the process of ethical mapping as a reflective device to enable practitioners to reflect on dilemmas of practice in order to learn through the experience and inform future practice. Ethical mapping is illustrated around a single experience that an intensive care practitioner shared in an ongoing guided reflection relationship. Within this process the practitioner draws on ethical principles to inform the particular situation, notably autonomy, doing harm, truth telling and advocacy. Through reflection, ethical principles are transcended and assimilated into knowing in practice, enabling the practitioner to become more ethically sensitive in responding to future situations.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding and managing interpersonal conflict as a therapeutic nursing activityInternational Journal of Nursing Practice, 1996
- A hermeneutic study of the experiences of relatives of critically ill patientsJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1995
- The intersection of technology and care in the ICUAdvances in Nursing Science, 1993
- The adversarial alliance: Developing therapeutic relationships between families and the team in brain injury rehabilitationBrain Injury, 1993
- Ownership and the harmonious team: barriers to developing the therapeutic nursing team in primary nursingJournal of Clinical Nursing, 1992
- Moral outrage and moral discourse in nurse-physician collaborationJournal of Professional Nursing, 1991
- Nursesʼ storiesAdvances in Nursing Science, 1990
- Clinical Decision Making of Staff NursesImage: the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 1987
- Strengthening family ‘interference’Journal of Advanced Nursing, 1984
- A Critical Theory of Adult Learning and EducationAdult Education, 1981