ENDA Abstracts book Enda Abstract book 16_07_2017_1 | Page 63
Claudia Cianfrocca RN MSN PhD
Student in Nursing and Public Health; University of Rome "Campus Bio Medico"
21 Via Álvaro del Portillo. 00128 Rome, IT
[email protected]
Daniela Tartaglini, Associate Professor in Nursing
University of Rome "Campus Bio Medico" University of Rome "Campus Bio
Medico"Rome, IT
[email protected]
Daniele Donati, RN MSN PhD Student in Nursing and Public Health
University of Rome "Campus Bio Medico" University of Rome "Campus Bio
Medico" Rome, IT
[email protected]
ETHICAL ISSUES REGARDING QUALITY
IMPROVEMENT AND MORAL DISTRESS IN
NURSING: A LITERATURE REVIEW
Nurses are committed to providing quality nursing care, as stated in the
International Code of Nursing Ethics (2012). Despite Quality Improvement(QI)
being the main goal for every hospital, nursing shortages, financial restrictions,
and the continuing change of the health care world, leave professionals with
ethical dilemmas and moral distress when providing patient care. QI has been
defined as systematic data-guided activities designed to bring about immediate
improvements in health care delivery. Moral distress is described as a feeling
associated with moral choices and with knowing the morally correct action to take
but not being able to take it due to institutional constraints or barriers. The analysis
of the articles showed that even if physicians, nurses, and other clinicians have a
special ethical responsibility to serve the interests of their patients - including the
responsibility to maintain and continually strive to improve the quality of care -
the activities related to QI should be judged by the same standards used for the
traditional human subject research. Since QI activities directly involve patients
they need to be submitted to ethical review. QI is an intrinsic part of good clinical
care, however, professionals perceive that quality of care can decrease especially
because of moral distress, which influences clinical practice and even quality. QI is
as connected to patient's life as it is connected with nurses' profession. These
connections need further study and they must be considered by nursing leaders in
order to provide ethical and quality nursing care from all points of view.
Keywords:
Ethic, Moral Distress, Quality Improvement, Nursing
Congress Topics:
Ethics in the Workplace
Ivica
61 |
Benko
RN, BScN, MScN, MSc HQM