| A | B |
| autonomy | personal choice and freedom of choice |
| beneficence | doing good- an ethical principle that says every action should be for good |
| nonmalficence | do no harm, if you are going to do something to a patient make sure you do it right and cause no harm |
| HIPAA | the law that outlines confidentiality of medcial information in the US |
| confidentiality | patient information must be kept private and restricted to only those who need to know |
| battery | touching without consent |
| assault | treat to cause bodily harm |
| informed consent | the person fully understands the treatment, the complications, the alternative treatments and the possible outcomes of the treatment t |
| standard of care | failure to follow can lead to legal liability |
| accountability | when a nurse assumes care of the patient she isnow responsible for that patient and her actions as a nurse towards that patient |
| ethnic stereotype | fixed concept of how a specific culture will act or think |
| ethics | the study of right and wrong related to human conduct |
| nursing code of ethics | lists the rules of good conduct |
| scope of practice | what you can and cannot do while providing nursing care |
| civil law | legal actions against you that can conduct violates a person rights, the intent is to make the aggrieved person whole again |
| professional negligence | malpractice, failing to meet the standard of care |
| beliefs | what you belive about a subject- does not have to be validated |
| values | what and how much you place importance to or onto something or someone- very individual |
| legal | laws that have been passed by congress and can be applied to health professionals |
| Justice | far and equal treatment, given what is due to the person |
| fideltiy | be true, be a patient advocate |
| advocate | every action is in the best interest of the patient, never your best interest |
| negligence | must establish duty, breach of duty and harm to prove |