What are you testing for with the newborn blood samples? So I compiled the following information. These tests change everyday and there many be new ones added but here is a list of a few
.
PKU
When this disorder is detected early, feeding an infant a special formula low in phenylalanine can prevent mental retardation. A low-phenylalanine diet will need to be followed throughout childhood and adolescence and perhaps into adult life. This diet cuts out all high-protein foods, so people with PKU often need to take a special artificial formula as a nutritional substitute. Incidence: 1 in 10,000 to 25,000.
Congenital Hypothyroidism
This is the disorder most commonly identified by routine screening. Affected babies don't have enough thyroid hormone and so develop retarded growth and brain development. (The thyroid, a gland at the front of the neck, releases chemical substances that control metabolism and growth.)
If the disorder is detected early, a baby can be treated with oral doses of thyroid hormone to permit normal development. Incidence: 1 in 4,000.
Galactosemia
Babies with galactosemia lack the enzyme that converts galactose (one of two sugars found in lactose) into glucose, a sugar the body is able to use. As a result, milk (including breast milk) and other dairy products must be eliminated from the diet. Otherwise, galactose can build up in the system and damage the body's cells and organs, leading to blindness, severe mental retardation, growth deficiency, and even death.
Incidence: 1 in 60,000 to 80,000. Several less severe forms of galactosemia that may be detected by newborn screening may not require any intervention
Sickle Cell Disease
Sickle cell disease is an inherited blood disease in which red blood cells mutate into abnormal "sickle" shapes and can cause episodes of pain, damage to vital organs such as the lungs and kidneys, and even death. Young children with sickle cell disease are especially prone to certain dangerous bacterial infections, such as pneumonia (inflammation of the lungs) and meningitis (inflammation of the brain and spinal cord).
Studies suggest that newborn screening can alert doctors to begin antibiotic treatment before infections occur and to monitor symptoms of possible worsening more closely. The screening test can also detect other disorders affecting hemoglobin (the oxygen-carrying substance in the blood).
Incidence: about 1 in every 500 African-American births and 1 in every 1,000 to 1,400 Hispanic-American births; also occurs with some frequency among people of Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and South Asian descent.
Biotinidase Deficiency
Babies with this condition don't have enough biotinidase, an enzyme that recycles biotin (a B vitamin) in the body. The deficiency may cause seizures, poor muscle control, immune system impairment, hearing loss, mental retardation, coma, and even death. If the deficiency is detected in time, however, problems can be prevented by giving the baby extra biotin. Incidence: 1 in 72,000 to 126,000.
Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
This is actually a group of disorders involving a deficiency of certain hormones produced by the adrenal gland. It can affect the development of the genitals and may cause death due to loss of salt from the kidneys. Lifelong treatment through supplementation of the missing hormones manages the condition. Incidence: 1 in 12,000.
Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD)
Babies with MSUD are missing an enzyme needed to process three amino acids that are essential for the body's normal growth. When not processed properly, these can build up in the body, causing urine to smell like maple syrup or sweet, burnt sugar. These babies usually have little appetite and are extremely irritable.
If not detected and treated early, MSUD can cause mental retardation, physical disability, and even death. A carefully controlled diet that cuts out certain high-protein foods containing those amino acids can prevent this. Like people with PKU, those with MSUD are often given a formula that supplies the necessary nutrients missed in the special diet they must follow. Incidence: 1 in 250,000.
Tyrosinemia
Babies with this amino acid metabolism disorder have trouble processing the amino acid tyrosine. If it accumulates in the body, it can cause mild retardation, language skill difficulties, liver problems, and even death from liver failure. Treatment requires a special diet and sometimes a liver transplant. Early diagnosis and treatment seem to offset long-term problems, although more information is needed. Incidence: not yet determined. Some babies have a mild self-limited form of tyrosinemia.
Cystic Fibrosis
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetic disorder that particularly affects the lungs and digestive system and makes kids who have it more vulnerable to repeated lung infections. There is no known cure — treatment involves trying to prevent serious lung infections (sometimes with antibiotics) and providing adequate nutrition. Early detection may help doctors reduce the problems associated with CF, but the real impact of newborn screening has yet to be determined. Incidence: 1 in 2,000 Caucasian babies; less common in African-Americans, Hispanics, and Asians.
MCAD deficiency (medium chain acyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency)
Children with this fatty acid metabolism disorder are prone to repeated episodes of low blood sugar (hypoglycemia), which can cause seizures and interfere with normal growth and development. Treatment makes sure kids don't fast (skip meals) and supplies extra nutrition (usually by intravenous nutrients) when they're ill. Early detection and treatment can help affected children live normal lives.
Toxoplasmosis
Toxoplasmosis is a parasitic infection that can be transmitted through the mother's placenta to an unborn child. The disease-causing organism, which is found in uncooked or undercooked meat, can invade the brain, eye, and muscle, possibly resulting in blindness and mental retardation. The benefit of early detection and treatment is uncertain. Incidence: 1 in 1,000. But only one or two states screen for toxoplasmosis.
These aren't the only disorders that can be detected through newborn screening. Other conditions that are candidates for newborn screening include:
Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a childhood form of muscular dystrophy that can be detected through a blood test
HIV
neuroblastoma, a type of cancer that can be detected with a urine test
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Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Stem Cells-What do you think? Ethical issues? Ideas?
A Market for Human Eggs
New York State was the first state that legally allowed
women to donate their eggs for embryonic cell research. The women were given $10,000 for their
donation and a guarantee that the eggs would be used for research. This area of research is not without
controversy by critics that see this form of research as killing as well as the
potential for the exploitation of women, especially poor women, who may not be
the ideal candidate for donation. The purpose of this paper is to explore the
ethical dilemmas in women that donate eggs to stem cell research or to
infertile couples and whether or not they should be compensated for their
donation (Stein, 2009).
Background
The human egg (oocyte) donation has been used for many
years. The women take hormones to hyper-stimulate
their ovaries to produce eggs that are harvested by a physician, during a
surgical procedure, fertilized in vitro and placed back in the uterus for
development. The difference in stem cell research is that the eggs are fertilized
in vitro and then the genetic materials (stem cells) are removed for
research. The cells are not allowed to
develop into an embryo. Embryonic cell research is considered a promising area
in science. The stem cells have the
ability to become any cell that is needed to cure many different diseases and
injuries. According to the Stem Cell
Research Foundation (SCRF) stem cell research is showing promise in the
treatment of heart disease, arthritis, osteoporosis, cancer, Alzheimer’s
disease, juvenile diabetes, and spinal cord injuries (Tong, 2007).
The
ethical dilemma comes into play when the embryonic cells are destroyed when
they are only days old. This is view by
the critics as killing. In Kantian
Ethics he believed that Moral rules have no exceptions; killing is always
wrong. Critics that consider stem cell research killing have to agree that this
does follow Kantian Ethics (Stein, 2009).
Stem cells can be found in limited numbers in adults
and in newborns’ umbilical cord blood,
but most scientists feel that the best source is in the “inner mass of a
blastocyst (a stage in the development of a pre-embryo that occurs
approximately 4 days after fertilization) or in the gonadal tissue of aborted
fetuses” (Tong, 2007, p.221). There are two ways to secure pre-embryos for stem
cell research that will be discussed in this essay. The first is to use the left over embryos
from couples that have produced more than it is likely that they will have
implanted back into the uterus. Their options are to discard them, put them up
for adoptions, keeping them frozen or donate them for research. The second source of pre-embryos is to
advertise and obtain eggs and sperm from random donors. It is not surprising that stem cell research
with embryonic stem cells has some morally and ethical controversy (Tong, 2007).
In November 2005 a South Korean scientist, Woo Hwang, was conducting stem-cell research
and started an international debate when it was discovered that the eggs he had
acquired were from his junior scientists in his laboratory. Over a period of three years Hwang worked
with over 2000 eggs from 129 different women.
It is not clear the amount that these women received for the donations
or if they received any payment at all.
While it is clear that egg donors should be compensated on the basis of
time and discomfort the international debate continues on the amount and what
expenses will be reimbursed to the donor (Steinbrook, 2006).
The Positives and the Negatives
Egg donation requires a significant amount of time, as
well as discomfort from the medication’s that can cause hot flashes, vaginal dryness,
fatigue, insomnia, body aches, mood swings, breast tenderness, headaches and
visual problems. There is a chance of hyper-stimulation
of the ovaries which is usually an unpredictable response to ovulation-induction
therapy and it causes a fluid shift causing complication such as ascites,
pleural and pericardial effusions. The
risk of venous thromboembolism is increased and there is some concern that the
women who receive multiple cycles may have a higher risk of ovarian cancer
later in life. This is based on research
in animal because there have not been enough studies on human subjects at this
time. There
may be future effects to fertility and the future off-spring of the woman that
donates her eggs (Steinbrook, 2006).
The
no-compensation policy idea has become the standard for stem cell research
across the country and internationally there are drafted guidelines that
prohibit “undue inducements”. The ruling
of California’s Proposition 71 “prohibits payment in excess of the amount of
reimbursement of direct expenses incurred as a result of the procedure” (Gerber,
2007, p. 220). California’s rules have become the standard for stem cell
research retrieval of eggs. This does
not however have any effect on egg donation for in vitro fertilization, only
for women who donate their eggs for scientific research. As a result of this no-compensation ruling
the high demand for eggs for embryonic stem cell research has far exceeded the
supply and altruism alone may not be enough to meet the demand. Many states are facing shortages and are
contesting the policy of no-compensation.
Women have a choice of donating
their eggs to an infertile couple for compensation or donating their eggs to
stem cell research for no-compensation (Gerber, 2007).
While we
as a society remain uneasy with the sale of eggs, it is an acceptable practice
to sell sperm. Is it because there are
only a limited number of eggs that a female produces or because we live in a
male dominated society? The procedure is not without discomfort and risk in a
female. There is no risk involved with
the donation of sperm and the supply is endless.
People
participate in research for many reasons; many of them are self-serving,
including securing access to healthcare and furthering the knowledge of a condition
that they or a family member may suffer from with the hope that one day there
will be a treatment or cure (Johnson, 2006).
In 1999 Ron Harris held a human egg auction that featured
three female models with pictures and descriptions, the bidding started at
$15,000. The high volume of people
accessing the site over loaded his server and he had to discontinue his egg
auction. Recruiters look for prospect on
college campuses with the promise of $15,000-50,000, depending on your
ethnicity, height, IQ, and eye color. In
the United States alone over 75,000 births per year are a result of assisted
reproductive technology (Resnik, 2001).
There are some benefits for selling human eggs; it helps
the donors economically if they use their eggs to help an infertile couple have
a child. That couple will have a child and the child will have a life. There may still be some compensation for time
and expenses if eggs are donated to research (Resnik, 2001). Over all the negative aspects far out weight
the positives.
Stakeholders are all women that have donated eggs for
research. Infertile couples that desire
to have children and the children that will be born from the donated eggs. As well as all persons receiving treatment as
a result of the stem cell research that is being conducted today and in the
future. The list of stakeholders is
endless and the possibilities are astounding.
After the scandal in South Korea it is uncertain how the
research groups will obtain approval and funding for the stem cell research,
the number of donors they will be able to obtain, and whether enough women will
agree to donate if the only monetary compensation is for their expenses. There is concern that the only women that
will donate will be friends and family of persons with diseases and
disabilities, whom have an optimistic point of view that they are helping their
family member. There is extensive
publicity and advertising that introduces the idea of egg donation in hope that
it could motivate more women to consider donating their eggs to research (Steinbrook,
2006).
Friday, July 20, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Informed Consent.
Robert J. Levine’s article Informed Consent: Some
Challenges to the Universal Validity of the Western Model (1991) Beauchamp
& Walters (2008) p.132-137. In this
article the author states that “Informed consent holds a central place in the
ethical justification of research involving human subjects” (p. 132) In order
for it to be informed consent four points need to be made it must be
“voluntary”, the patient must be “legally competent’, “informed” and able to
“comprehend” what is being advised. The
purpose of research on humans must be used to improve the lives of others,
either through improving the ability to diagnose a problem, the use of
therapeutic and prophylactic procedures and finally understanding of the
disease or the pathogens of disease. Special considerations must be obtained
when the research involves the environment and animals.
The
Declaration of Helsinki (1964) http://www.cirp.org/library/ethics/helsinki/
Lists
the Basic Principles as:
1.
Biomedical research involving human subjects must
conform to general accepted scientific principles and should be based on
adequate preformed laboratory and animal experimentations and on a thorough
knowledge of scientific literature.
2.
The design and performance of each experiment procedure
involving human subjects should be clearly formulated in an experimental
protocol which should be transmitted to a specially appointed independent
committee for consideration.
3.
Biomedical research involves human subjects should be
conducted only by scientifically qualified persons. The responsibility for the human subject must
rest with a medically qualified person and never rest on the subject of the
research, even though the subject has given his or her consent.
4.
Biomedical research involving human subjects cannot
legitimately be carried out unless the importance of the objective is in the
proportion to the inherent risk to the subject.
5.
Every biomedical research project involves human
subjects should be preceded by careful assessment of predictable risks in comparison
with foreseeable benefits to the subject or to others. Concern for the interest
of the subject must always prevail over the interest of science and society.
6.
The right of the research subject to safeguard his or
her integrity must always be respected.
Every precaution should be taken to respect the privacy of the subjects
and to minimize the impact of the study on the subject’s physical and mental
integrity and the personality of the subject.
7.
Physicians should abstain from engaging in research
projects involving human subjects unless they are satisfied that the hazards
involved are believed to be predictable.
Physicians should cease any investigation if the hazards are found to
outweigh the benefits of the study.
8.
In publication of the results of his or her research,
the physician is obligated to preserve the accuracy of the results. Report of experimentation not in accordance
with the principles laid down in the Declaration should not be accepted for
publication.
9.
In any research on human beings, each potential subject
must be adequately informed of the aims, methods, anticipated benefits and
potentional hazards of the study and the discomfort it may entail. He or she should be informed that he or she
is at liberty to abstain from participation in the study and that he or she is
free to with draw visor her consent to participate at any time. The physician should then obtain the
subject’s freely given informed consent, preferably inheriting.
10. When
obtaining informed consent for the research project the physician should be
cautious if the subject is in dependent relationship to him or her or may
consent under duress. In that case the
informed consent should be obtained by a physician who isn’t engaged in the
investigation and who is completely independent of this official relationship.
11. In
cases of legal incompetence, informed consent should be obtained from the legal
guardian in accordance with national legislation. Where physical or mental incapacity makes it
impossible to obtain informed consent, or when the subject is a minor, permission
from the responsible relative replaces that of the subject in accordance with
the national legislation. Whenever the
minor child is in fact able to give consent the minor’s consent must be obtained
in addition to the consent of the minor’s legal guardian.
12. The
research protocol should always contain a statement of the ethical
consideration involved and should indicate that the principles enunciated in
the declaration are complied with.
This
document has been cited in the article many times and I felt that it was
important to clarify exactly what are the Declaration of Helsinki’s Principles.
It is felt by the Universalists that
this Declaration of Helsinki is a widely excitable universal standard for
biomedical research and it is used in many countries. These are the principles that are used to
conduct research universally.
The Pluralists feel that the
Declaration of Helsinki shows a Western view and that it does not guide the
investigators to show the respect to others in the world.
The author came to four ideas to
provide informed consent to all people in all nations:
- All plans to conduct research involving humans subjects should be reviewed and approved by a research ethics committee.
- Proposals to employ consent procedures that do not conform to the international standard should be justified by the researcher and submitted for review and approved by a national ethics review body.
- There should be established an international ethics review body to provide advice, consultation and guidance to national ethics review bodies when such is requested.
- In the case of externally sponsored research: Ethics review should be conducted in the initial country.
This
article was a bit confusing to exactly what they were trying to point out. After I made the reference the Declaration of
Helsinki it made more sense to me once I knew what they were talking about. He needed to make more of a reference to that
than he did to Immanuel Kant, who seems to be one of his favorites. I apologize for the length of this posting
but it needed to be clarified.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Monday, July 9, 2012
The Washington Post-New York to Pay for Eggs from Stem Cell Research
By Rob Stein,
Staff Writer, June 26, 2009
New York is the first state to allow women to give their eggs to embryonic stem cell research. The critics are afraid that the women will be exploited. The women will be given $10,000 for their donations of eggs for experiments.
“This is a great, appropriate policy,” said Susan Solomon, co-founder of the New York Stem Cell Foundation, a private nonprofit research organization. “This could help us to pursue some critical experiments that we hope will lead to treatments for devastating diseases.”
One of the goals to that they want to produce stem cells using the nucleus from the patients cells, the stem cells produced would not be rejected by the host immune system.
Laurie Zoloth, a Northwestern University Bioethics, states “Whenever society starts to pay for relationships that are traditionally done with Altruism and generosity with in families, it raises the issue of whether there is anything not for sale.”
Jonathan Moreno, a bioethics at University of Pennsylvania States that “In a field that’s already the object of a great deal of controversy, the question is, are we at the point where we really need to go that route in order to do the science?” “I’m not convinced”
Embryonic cell research is considered a promising area in biomedical science. Stem cells are able to become any cell that is needed to cure diseases. The controversy comes with the embryonic cells that are destroyed when they are days old, some see this as killing.
Women have been reimbursed for donating eggs for infertile couples to have children in vitro; this is really not any different except that they are not allowing the embryos to develop fully. They are taking the genetic material from the nucleus of the eggs and using the stem cells to research cures for disease. There is a lot of bioethical controversy in the stem cell research area of biomedicine. Critics worry that the move could lead to the exploitation of women, especially poor women, who tend not to be in demand for infertility donation.
In the Kantian Ethics he believed that Moral rules have no exceptions. Killing is always wrong. Lying is always wrong. The action described by the moral rule is necessary and independent of surrounding circumstances or purposes. The Critics that consider stem cell research killing would agree that this does not follow the Kantian Ethics.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Should sterilization be mandated by the government?
I chose the article by Stephen Jay Gould, 1985, Carrie Buck’s Daughter, p. 256-260. The article points out that bad thing come in threes. Two bad things are just an accident but three is a pattern. This is how Virginia came up with their sterilization laws. The point being that, “Three generations of imbeciles are enough.” Virginia passed the eugenic sterilization laws in 1924. At the time Carrie Buck was 18 years old and committed to an institution for the Epileptics and Feeble-Minded. Carrie herself was an illegitimate child and when entering the institution she was pregnant, and unmarried. Harry Laughlin testified that Emma Buck, Carrie’s mother tested to be seven years and eleven months , Carrie to be nine years on the Stanford-Binet test of IQ. Under these guidelines they were deemed imbeciles. “Generally feeble-mindedness is caused by the inheritance of degenerate qualities; but sometimes it might be caused by environmental factors which are not hereditary. In the case given, the evidence points strongly towards the feeblemindedness and moral delinquency of Carrie Buck being due, primarily to inheritance and not to environment.” Carrie Buck was sterilized. Nothing more was heard of the case until 1980 when Dr. K Ray Nelson began researching the records of the institution where Carrie had been sterilized. He found Carrie alive and well and after being tested my professionals they found her to be neither mentally ill nor retarded. They discovered that while Carrie was in the care of a foster home she was raped by a relative of the foster family and they wanted her institutionalized for sexual immorality and social deviance. Vivian was adopted by the family that had raised Carrie and it was found that she was a perfectly normal, average student. She died at the age of 8 of enteric colitis. The research showed that this famous case was based on falsehoods. There were no imbeciles in the three generations of Bucks. In my practice I have not had to deal with forced sterilization. I know that it was done and I know that it was often a court ordered sterilization for a mentally handicapped person, usually female. Just as a foot note Carries’ sister Doris was also sterilized but was told that she was having her appendix removed. Not until all of this was reopened did she know the truth. I really do not find any weaknesses in this article. It is easy to understand and to the point. It is a sad point in our history that people thought they had to right to pick and choice who could reproduce and who could not, based on facts that were unfounded.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
The case of Terri Shiavo
On February 25, 1990 Terri Schiavo suffered a cardiac arrest which resulted in severe brain injury leaving her in an irreversible vegetative state, all food and fluids had to be delivered to her via feeding tube. After years of experimental therapies and treatments Michael Schiavo, her husband, was able to accept the diagnosis and he believed that his wife would not want to be kept alive indefinitely in her condition. “ the right of competent patients to refuse unwanted medical treatment, including artificial hydration and nutrition, is a settled ethical and legal issue in this country—based on the right to bodily integrity” (Quill, 2005, p.1631). The problem in this case was the definition of family and how it is to be decided when members disagree with what is determined to be in the best interest of the patient. Michael wanted the feeding tube removed, her parents did not. It was left up to the courts to decide. After nine years Terri Schiavo was allowed to have her feeding tube removed and she died 13 days later on March 31, 2005 (Quill, 2005).
There is an obligation to all patients and families to include in our nursing care the patients’ rights to refuse medical treatment if they feel that it is not in their best interest. As healthcare professionals we may not always agree with their decision but it is not our place to decide what is best for them. It is our place to provide them with the quality healthcare that they rightly deserve, support their decision and advise them of the consequences if they choose to not follow the recommended plan of care. It is unfortunate when it becomes necessary for the courts to become involved in the decision making process, which can take years for the final decisions, endless trips to court, the appeals process and then a final decision.
Can you find another historical ethical case that uses the principle of ethics?
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
The Requirements
The Death with Dignity Act is a citizen’s initiative that has allowed Physician Assisted Suicide (PAS) in Oregon. The patients must be older than 18, be an Oregon resident, be capable of making and communicating health care decisions, have a terminal illness with less than six months to live and voluntarily request the prescriptions. The patient must make one written request and two verbal requests, separated by at least 15 days, to their physician. The physician must consult with another physician to confirm the terminal diagnosis and the poor prognosis, and then determine if the patient is capable of making the decision; refer the patient for counseling if there is any question regarding the patient’s ability to make decisions before the prescriptions are given. The physician must advise the patient on alternative treatment options such as hospice, palliative care, and pain control options. The physician as well as pharmacists must report all prescriptions written and filled to the Health Division (OSHD, 2010).
Oregon State Health Department (OSHD) (2010) Physician Assisted Suicide Statistics, Retrieve from: http://www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/pas/docs/statute.pdf?ga=t.
For those of you that may have questions about the new Health Affordability laws here is a quiz and a site that is full of knowledge, answers and questions, Enjoy!
http://healthreform.kff.org/quizzes/health-reform-quiz.aspx
Monday, July 2, 2012
Does the patient have The "Right to Die"?
In 1997, Oregon became the first and only state to legalize the terminal patients Right to Die with Dignity. Since that time, in November 2008, the residents of Washington State have also adopted laws to support the patients’ right to physician assisted suicide. The term Right to Die “is used in a legal context to mean that an individual has a right to refuse medical treatment and the refusal of such treatment will cause death” (Matzo & Sherman, 2006, p. 189). In total, from 1998-2009, 460 residents of Oregon have chosen to ingest a lethal dose of medication to end their life and suffering (Oregon State Health Department, 2010). Does the patient have the right to die?
Matzo, M. & Sherman, D. (2006) Palliative Care Nursing: quality at end of life (2nd Ed) New York, Springer Publishing.
Oregon State Health Department. (OSHD) (2010) Physician Assisted Suicide Statistics, Retrieve from http://www.oregon.gov/DHS/ph/pas/docs/statute.pdf?ga=t.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Which Principle of Ethics can you use?
Terminal Sedation has its place in
the arena of palliative care. This is a
form of sedation that allows the patient to be unconscious and unaware of the
surroundings so that they may have a painless peaceful death. It is important to emphasize that the patient
is given IV sedation to the point of unconsciousness and it is the disease that
is the cause of death not the terminal sedation. Death will happen as a natural consequence
not from the sedation. It is palliative
care and not euthanasia. The emphasis on
the hospice concept is to neither hasten death nor attempt to cure the
disease. It is to assist the patient in
as painless as possible death. For
states that do not have a physician assisted suicide laws this is a form of
control that the patients can elect and will have a guarantee that their last
moments will be pain free. Terminal
sedation needs to remain an option for patients in the end of life, it is the
only guarantee to a painless, peaceful death.
Rietjens J.C., van Delden J.M., van der Heide A, (2006) Terminal Sedation and Euthanasia: A Comparison of Clinical Practices. Arch Intern Med. 166(7):749-753. Retrieved http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=410108
Rietjens J.C., van Delden J.M., van der Heide A, (2006) Terminal Sedation and Euthanasia: A Comparison of Clinical Practices. Arch Intern Med. 166(7):749-753. Retrieved http://archinte.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=410108
Next we will talk about Physician Assisted Suicide be prepared!
Ethics
The Nursing Code of Ethics and Ethical Dilemmas
Here are the principles of Ethical decision making!
Autonomy: The right to self-determination. An ethical principle that involves the nurse’s willingness to respect patients’ rights to make decisions about and for themselves, even if the nurse does not agree with the patients’ decisions.
Beneficence: The duty to do good; prevent harm and remove harm.
Care: A broad concept that “in its simplest form, can be described as an attitude or orientation that leads to the beneficent attending, through acts or omissions, of one person towards another” (Cortis & Dendrick, 2003, p.78).
Ethics: The study of values in human conduct or the study of right conduct. Ethics offers a critical, rational, defensible, systematic and intellectual approach to determining what is right or best in a difficult situation.
Justice: The equitable distribution of risks and benefits. Equals ought to be treated equally and unequals may be treated unequally.
Moral: The personal beliefs and cultural values that are the basis for human conduct.
Nonmaleficence: The obligation not to inflict harm intentionally (Beauchamp & Childress, 2001).
Values: The set of personal beliefs and attitudes that we hold in high regard.
Beauchamp, T. L. & Childress, J. F. (2001). Principles of biomedical ethics (5th Ed). New York: Oxford University Press.
Cortis, J.D. & Kendrick, K. (2003). Nursing ethics, caring and culture. Nursing Ethics, 10, 77-88.
Here are the principles of Ethical decision making!
Autonomy: The right to self-determination. An ethical principle that involves the nurse’s willingness to respect patients’ rights to make decisions about and for themselves, even if the nurse does not agree with the patients’ decisions.
Beneficence: The duty to do good; prevent harm and remove harm.
Care: A broad concept that “in its simplest form, can be described as an attitude or orientation that leads to the beneficent attending, through acts or omissions, of one person towards another” (Cortis & Dendrick, 2003, p.78).
Ethics: The study of values in human conduct or the study of right conduct. Ethics offers a critical, rational, defensible, systematic and intellectual approach to determining what is right or best in a difficult situation.
Justice: The equitable distribution of risks and benefits. Equals ought to be treated equally and unequals may be treated unequally.
Moral: The personal beliefs and cultural values that are the basis for human conduct.
Nonmaleficence: The obligation not to inflict harm intentionally (Beauchamp & Childress, 2001).
Values: The set of personal beliefs and attitudes that we hold in high regard.
Beauchamp, T. L. & Childress, J. F. (2001). Principles of biomedical ethics (5th Ed). New York: Oxford University Press.
Cortis, J.D. & Kendrick, K. (2003). Nursing ethics, caring and culture. Nursing Ethics, 10, 77-88.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Do I have an opinion?
There was a time when everything I needed to know was in a text book! The answers were easy to find, and translate into my own words. Now it's all about my opinion. Do I have an opinion and do you really care about my opinion? What if I have no opinion on that particular subject? Does it mean anything? May be my opinion will not make a change. Maybe my opinion is not particularly witty or intelligent. Maybe my opinion is as simple as "because it was the right thing to do".
Friday, May 11, 2012
Mothers
No
language can express the power, and beauty, and heroism, and majesty of
a mother's love. It shrinks not where man cowers, and grows stronger
where man faints, and over wastes of worldly fortunes sends the radiance
of its quenchless fidelity like a star. ~Edwin Hubbell Chapin
Florence
Nursing
is an art: and if it is to be made an art, it requires an exclusive
devotion as hard a preparation, as any painter's or sculptor's work; for
what is the having to do with dead canvas or dead marble, compared with
having to do with the living body, the temple of God's spirit? It is
one of the Fine Arts: I had almost said, the finest of Fine Arts.
~Florence Nightingale
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Should we have tougher penalties for patients that physically assault healthcare professionals?
I was working for a catholic
based hospital that had mandatory education for the treatment of
"difficult patients" , one of the charge nurses on the medical floor was
lecturing about a patient that they had on the floor for a number of
months and she was telling us about how he was a diabetic who was alert
and oriented and as the nurses would enter his room he would throw the
insulin syringes at them like darts. She went into this elaborate plan
that include behavior modification and positive rewards for good
behavior. After about 15 minutes of being totally dumbfounded I had to
speak up. I explained to her that if that behavior occurred outside the
4 walls of the hospital that it would be considered assault, the police
would be involved and an arrest would be made, and why would we ever
accept that kind of behavior from anyone whether they are in the
hospital or not! I say hold them responsible for their actions. What
the world do we pay security for anyway? If we are not safe to enter a
patients room then that patient needs to be held accountable and placed
in the appropriate facility, which may not be their first choice.
Here's a petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/the-governor-of-ca-tougher-penalties-for-nurse-assaults
Here's a petition: http://www.change.org/petitions/the-governor-of-ca-tougher-penalties-for-nurse-assaults
Practice States bahhh hummbug!
So it appears that if you live in a practice state and you do not meet the required number of practice hours that you are not considered active in nursing and you are required to either (1) take a reentry course or (2) write your own reentry program. Now mind you, attending Masters level courses in nursing do not count, so the reentry course is a review of basic nursing practice, which I have been doing for over 25 years. In order to renew your license you need to show proof that you attended 9 hours of pain management, be current in CPR and have the required practice hours which are around 160 per year or 940 over 5 years. I took the LPN boards in 1984, returned to school and took RN boards in 1988, now because I do not have my practice hours I must take it again, which I did yesterday. 75 questions and it shut off, I either did really well or really bad. I can't find out until tomorrow. So for now I must wait to receive my limited license so that I have complete my 160 hours of clinical time so that I can finish my MSN degree. What a mess I have gotten myself into!
Introductions of what I view as important
Some times we are Blindfolded by what is not so obvious. This Magazine is for those who wish to see beyond the Blindfold. It is a socially conscious magazine! Check it out! I guess it doesn't hurt that the sexiest vampire is on the cover as well!
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