Affiliation:
1. Department of Philosophy and Religion, Case Annex Room 271, Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, KY 40475-3101, USA
Abstract
Twenty-five long-term care nurses in eight nursing homes in central Kentucky were inter viewed concerning ways in which they might assist elderly residents to preserve and enhance their personal autonomy. Data from the interviews were analysed using grounded theory methodology. Seven specific categories of assisting were discovered and described: personalizing, informing, persuading, shaping instrumental circumstances, considering, mentioning opportunities, and assessing causes of an impaired capacity for decision-making. The ethical implications of these categories of assisting for clinical prac tice are examined. Although nurses recognized the importance of resident autonomy, the majority of them failed consistently to employ the categories of assistance to foster resi dent self-determination and most of them held an inadequate understanding of the con cepts of consent and decisional capacity. To assure confidentiality, pseudonyms are used in the following cases and discussions for all names of nurses, residents and facilities.
Subject
Issues, ethics and legal aspects
Reference26 articles.
1. Autonomy in Long Term Care: Some Crucial Distinctions1
2. The Theory and Practice of Autonomy
3. Dworkin G. Autonomy and informed consent. In: The President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research. Making health care decisions: appendices. Studies on the foundations of informed consent, vol. 3. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office , 1982: 63-81.
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32 articles.
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