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  2. Nursing ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_ethics

    For example, a concern to promote beneficence may be expressed in traditional medical ethics by the exercise of paternalism, where the health professional makes a decision based upon a perspective of acting in the patient's best interests. However, it is argued by some that this approach acts against person-centred values found in nursing ethics.

  3. Ethics of care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethics_of_care

    In the field of nursing, the ethics of care has been criticized by Peter Allmark, Helga Kuhse, and John Paley. [28] Allmark criticized its focus on the mental state of the carer, on the grounds that subjectively caring does not prevent an individual's care from being harmful. [ 28 ]

  4. Levine's conservation model for nursing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levine's_Conservation_Model...

    The conservation model of nursing is based around the law of conservation of energy, combined with the psycho-social aspects of the individual's needs. Levine believed that these needs are joined within the individual as a "cascade of life events, churning and changing as the environmental challenge is confronted and resolved in each individual ...

  5. 'I held him in my arms': Nurses speak of heartbreak over ...

    www.aol.com/article/2014/10/27/i-held-him-in-my...

    By RYAN GORMAN Nurses who treated America's first Ebola patient have revealed the horrors and heartbreak of his final days. Sidia Rose, John Mulligan and Richard Townshend cared for Thomas Duncan ...

  6. Compassion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compassion

    Compassion involves "feeling for another" and is a precursor to empathy, the "feeling as another" capacity (as opposed to sympathy, the "feeling towards another"). In common parlance, active compassion is the desire to alleviate another's suffering. [1] Compassion involves allowing ourselves to be moved by suffering to help alleviate and ...

  7. Universal Compassion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Compassion

    The Lojong teachings in Universal Compassion have been used by caregivers, healers and hospice workers in the UK and US both to help them cope and to find effective techniques to manage the suffering of the ill and the dying. [4] For example, hospice psychologist Kathleen Dowling Singh (author of Grace in Dying) explains:

  8. Radical Loving Care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_Loving_Care

    Radical Loving Care is a book by Erie Chapman, [1] former chief executive of Riverside Methodist Hospital and U.S. Health Corp. (now OhioHealth) and former host of the Life Choices with Erie Chapman television series.

  9. Compassion fatigue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compassion_fatigue

    Compassion fatigue is defined as “the physical and mental exhaustion and emotional withdrawal experienced by those who care for sick or traumatized people over an extended period of time”. [86] Compassion fatigue usually occurs with those whom we know; whether that is because of a personal relationship or professional relationship. [87]