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Discussion

Ethical Issues

Hi. I am wondering what the biggest nursing ethical issue is that you had to face and how you handled it. Thanks.

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Hello Everyone,

I apoligize for not directly addressing the particular issue you were previously discussing. I am new to site and haven't figured out how to start a post. I am a nursing student and am working on an ethical assignment. I was looking for some insight. Recently I witnessed a nurse faced with an ethical delimma. She had tried to administer insulin to her post op surgical patient. Upon entering the room the patient refused to allow the nurse to give her the injection.The problem was that the patient followed a sliding scale at home different from the doctors orders in the chart. The nurse respected the patient's wishes and called the doctor immediately. The doctor's response was to switch the patient to NPO status. The nurse hung up the phone and disucssed the issue with her collegues. The nurse was upset that the doctor would do such a thing and following the advice of her fellow coworkers worked up the courage to call the doctor back to change the order.

Does anyone have any experience in this type of situation? I find it troubling that the doctor would want to put a diabetic on NPO status in order to get the patient to take the prescribed medication. Am I wrong to view this as punishment. I could be missing something since I was merely an observer and was not directly involved in the patients care.

Let me know what you think and what you would have done in this situation.

Thanks :wink2:

Not honoring a pt's DNR status because the family wants all measures taken to revive him.

Aggressively treating a pt whose prognosis is very poor.

Doctors not giving a clear cut explanation of how poor the pt's outcome is.

Taking or doing tests/procedures that I feel are unnecessary. For example, my previous job, my patients would get labs drawn q6h, head cts daily, etc... Just too much done that wasn't necessary and too costly.

But, mostly treating pts who will live the rest of their lives in a nursing home, bedridden, and basically a vegetable is my biggest issue. I see the wrong and the right withdrawing care in pts. So, not sure which one is right.

The example you gave about the insulin & npo status, well that just wasn't the best thing for the patient, so the nurse did the right thing by calling back the physician. I don't believe an md would actually make a pt NPO just so they would take the medication. That doesn't really make since to me.

Thank you Nuerorachel for responding to my post. I agree with you that it doesn't really make sense for a doctor to change a patient to NPO status because she has an issue with her sliding scale. I feel that this would be even more harmful to a diabetic patient since she is also not recieving any insulin. Like I said, I could also be missing a little info since I wasn't directly involved with the patient care.

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