collaboration-✔✔ development of partnerships to achieve best outcomes
intraprofessional collaboration-✔✔ people within the same profession working together
interprofessional collaboration-✔✔ two different professions working together
interorganizational collaboration-✔✔ people within different organizations working
together
person centered care-✔✔ puts the patent and their family at the centre of care
Kim's theory-✔✔ based on interest in human rights and the need for informed consent,
recognized that many decisions required patients to be active participants
steps to interprofessional collaboration-✔✔ Role clarification, Interprofessional conflict
resolution, Collaborative leadership, Team functioning
interprofessional competency framework-✔✔ derived from social theories of learning
and complexity theory, recognizes the experiential and social nature of IP collaboration
and the complex practice environment in which it occurs
6 competences of interprofessional collaboration-✔✔ Role clarification,
Individual/client/family/community centered care, team functioning, collaborative
leadership, interprofessional communication, interprofessional conflict resolution
NSHA Collaborative care model-✔✔ patient and family at center, people, process,
information, technology-> surrounding
ethics-✔✔ the study or examination of morality through a variety of different
approaches
Values and Choices-✔✔ the notions of what we consider to be right or wrong are
based on the values and beliefs we hold
values and beliefs are-✔✔ instilled in us as children, evolve as we grow, are reflected
in the decisions we make
, Ethical Dilemma-✔✔ a situation involving values and beliefs where the clear course of
action is not obvious
Societal Ethics-✔✔ society provides a normative basis for ethical behavior with laws
and regulations. Law is the minimum standard of behavior to which all members of
society are held
legal standards of nursing-✔✔ clinical standards of care, liability, negligence,
malpractice
organizational ethics-✔✔ invovles a set of formal and informal principles and values
that guide behavior, decisions, and actions taken by member of an organization
professional ethics-✔✔ the ethical standards and expectation of a particular profession,
members are held at high standards
bioethics-✔✔ concerned broadly with ethical questions surrounding the biological
sciences, energing technologies and health policy
clinical ethics-✔✔ concerened with decisions at the bedside and other patient issues
research ethics-✔✔ a specialized feild within bioethics that looks at ethical conduct of
research using human subjects and animals
-✔✔
personal ethics-✔✔ describes individuals own ethical foundations and practice. There
can be conflict when our personal ethics intersects with other categories of ethics
sources of ethics-✔✔ family is the most powerful influence. Culture, peers, religion,
professional education, colleagues and organization
ethical problem-✔✔ any problem with an ethical dimension
ethical dilemma-✔✔ any problem that requires something must be done wrong to do
something that is right
ethical theories-✔✔ systematic approaches to help us examine why some things might
seem more wrong or more right when we attempt to resolve ethical dilemmas/ issues