Benevolence, a Central Moral Concept Derived From a Grounded Theory Study of Nursing Decision Making in Psychiatric Settings
Creator
Lutzen, Kim
Nordin, Conny
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Advanced Nursing. 1993 Jul; 18(7): 1106-1111.
Date
1993-07Subject
Aged; Beneficence; Benevolence; Caring; Coercion; Compassion; Conscience; Decision Making; Depressive Disorder; Drugs; Emotions; Empathy; Ethical Theory; Ethics; Intention; Love; Moral Development; Nurses; Nursing Ethics; Nursing Research; Patient Advocacy; Patient Care; Physician Nurse Relationship; Psychiatry; Psychoactive Drugs; Research; Survey; Treatment Refusal; Virtues;
Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Benevolence, a Central Moral Concept Derived From a Grounded Theory Study of Nursing Decision Making in Psychiatric Settings
Lutzen, Kim; Nordin, Conny (1993-07) -
Modifying Autonomy--a Concept Grounded in Nurses' Experiences of Moral Decision-Making in Psychiatric Practice
Lutzen, Kim; Nordin, Conny (1994-06)Fourteen experienced psychiatric nurses participated in a pilot study aimed at describing the experiential aspect of making decisions for the patient. In-depth interviews focused on conflicts, were transcribed, coded, and ... -
Modifying Autonomy -- a Concept Grounded in Nurses' Experiences of Moral Decision-Making in Psychiatric Practice
Lutzen, Kim; Nordin, Conny (1994-06)