Nurses’ skills in managing ethically difficult care situations: interpretation of nurses’narratives
- 28 June 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 21 (6) , 1073-1080
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.1995.21061073.x
Abstract
A total of 18 good nurses experienced in the care of cancer patients were asked to describe care situations where it had been difficult to know what was ‘the right and good’ thing to do for the patient The purpose of the study was to throw light on how they disclosed themselves in managing ethically difficult care situations, to elucidate the nurse as a part of the concrete care situation A phenomenological henneneutic interpretation disclosed the use of paradigm cases, placing in opposition to each other negative and positive outcomes, limiting and liberating maxims, and reserved and open approaches, on the part of nurses with limited versus extensive skills in managing ethically difficult care situations These patterns were interpreted as revealing psychological defences The study stresses the importance of recurrent education in nursing and nursing ethics, and of individual supportKeywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Registered nurses’and physicians’reflections on their narratives about ethically difficult care episodesJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1994
- Nurses' narratives concerning ethically difficult care situations: Interpretation by means of lögstrup's ethicsPsycho‐Oncology, 1994
- Strain among nurses and their emotional reactions during 1 year of systematic clinical supervision combined with the implementation of individualized care in dementia nursingJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1993
- Intensive care: situations of ethical difficultyJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1993
- Ethical reasoning associated with the feeding of terminally ill elderly cancer patientsCancer Nursing, 1990
- Hermeneutics and moral development: Interpreting narrative representations of moral experienceDevelopmental Review, 1990
- Ethical reasoning concerning, the feeding of terminally ill cancer patientsCancer Nursing, 1989
- Values, Moral Reasoning, and EthicsNursing Clinics of North America, 1989
- Encouraging students to be research mindedNurse Education Today, 1988
- FROM NOVICE TO EXPERT EXCELLENCE AND POWER IN CLINICAL NURSING PRACTICEThe American Journal of Nursing, 1984