2. Law may be defined as “the principles and
regulations established in a community by
some authority and applicable to its people
whether in the form of legislation or of
custom and policies recognized by judicial
decision
CRIMINAL LAW
CIVIL LAW
3. A tort is a civil wrong or injury for which
the court provides a remedy in the form of
money damages (black ,1999)
Intentional torts
Unintentional torts
4. Nursing standards of care are the legal
guidelines for minimally safe and adequate
nursing practice
Written policies and procedures of an
employing institution defines the standards
of care for nurses at that institution
6. Assault is any intentional threat to bring
about harmful or offensive contact with
another individual, no actual contact is
necessary
Eg. threatening a patient to give an
injection
Restrain a patient for an x-ray procedure
when the patient has refused consent
7. Battery is an intentional touching without
consent ,the contact is harmful to the
patient and causes an injury , or it is
merely offensive to the patient dignity
Eg. Giving an injection without patient
consent
A patient gives consent for left knee repair
but the surgeon performs right knee
surgery
8. Making a person stay in pace against is
wishes is false imprisonment
Eg. Restraining or confining a patient to a
locked room without proper consent could
constitute false imprisonment
9. Fraud is a willful and purposeful
misrepresentation that could cause or
caused harm to a person or property
Eg. giving incorrect information to obtain a
better positon or job
11. Negligence is conduct that falls below the
standard of care
Malpractice is one type of negligence called
professional negligence
12. Medication errors that result injury to
patient
Burns caused by equipment or spills of hot
liquids
Falls resulting in injury to patients
Errors in sponge ,instrument ,needle, count
in surgery cases
Failure to give adequate report , notify
physician, adequate monitoring the patient
13. INFORMED CONSENT Informed
consent is a patients agreement to allow
something to happen, such as surgery based
on a full disclosure of risks, benefits
alternatives and consequences of refusal
(Black, 1999)
DOCUMENTATION
EXECUTING PHYSICIANS ORDER
GOOD SAMARITAN LAW
PATIENT EDUCATION
PRIVILEGED COMMUNICATION
14. Informed consent is a patients agreement to
allow something to happen, such as surgery
based on a full disclosure of risks, benefits
alternatives and consequences of refusal
(Black, 1999)
16. CONFIDENTIALITY
ADVANCE DIRECTIVE
advance directives are legal documents stating
the wishes of individuals regarding health care in
institutions in which they are no longer capable of
giving personal informed consent
types; living wills
durable power of attorny
AUTOPSIES
17. ORGAN AND TISSUE DONATION
In India 5,00,000 people die because of
non availability of organs per year and
1,50,000 people await a kidney transplant
but only 5,000 get one 10 lakh people suffer
from corneal blindness and await transplant
(Times of india)
Types;
live donation
cedaveric donation
18. The transplantation of human organs
act, 1994
an act to provide for the regulation of
removal, storage and transplantation of
human organs for therapeutic purposes and
for the prevention of commercial dealings in
human organs and for matter connected
with it.
transplantation of human organs bill
2013
19. Medical termination of pregnancy act -1971
The prenatal diagnostic techniques act and
rules
20. Narcotics drugs and psychotropic
substances act 1985
Mental health act ,1987
21. Consumer protection act
Prohibition of sexual harassment of women
at workplace bill,2010
Biomedical waste (management and
handling) rules,1998
23. The word ethics derived from the Greek
term ethos, which means ‘customs`
Ethics can be defined as a branch of
philosophy that involves systematizing ,
defending and recommending concepts of
right and wrong conduct, often addressing
deputes of moral diversity(wikipedia)
25. It involves the right of self-determination or
choice, independence and freedom
Eg;the purposes of the preoperative
consent is to assure in writing that the
health care team respects the patients
independence by obtaining permission to
proceed
26. This principle promotes taking positive,
active steps to help others
Eg; a child immunisation causes discomfort
during administration but the benefits of
protection from disease both individual and
for society,outweigh the temporary
discomforts
27. It refers to the fundamental agreement to
do no harm
Eg;
28. It refers to the agreement to keep promises
, commitments ,responsibilities that one
has made oneself and others
Eg; if you assess a patient for pain and then
offer a plan to manage it, this principle
encourages you to do your best to keep the
promise to improve the patients comfort
29. Telling the truth or intentionally decieving or
misleading patient
Eg; should you tell the truth when you
know that it might cause harm to the
client?
families go to great lengthens to protect a
dying patient from the harsh truth of his
prognosis ,and the patient himself may not
wish to know
30. It refers principle of fairness
It implies equal treatment of all clients
Eg ;a national multidisciplinary committee
strives for fairness by ranking recipients
according to need, rather than resorting to
selling organs .
31. Code of ethics is defined as `a specific set
of professional behaviours and values the
professional interpreter must know and
abide by including confidentiality, accuracy,
privacy, integrity.
32. An ethical dilemma is a situation in
which a choice must be made between
two equally undesirable actions
33. 1. STAFF SHORTAGE
2. CULTURAL AND RELGIOUS SENSITIVITY
3. DELEGATION
4. TRUTH TELLING VS DECEPTION
34. Knowledge of staff nurses regarding legal and
ethical responsibilities in the field of psychiatric
nursing
A study to assess knowledge ,attitude and
practice of nurses regarding legal and ethical
concepts of nursing care of children in nicu and
picu of selected hospitals in chennai.
Nurses responses to ethical dilemmas in nursing
practice ;meta analysis