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Nurses as Moral Practitioners Encountering Parents in Neonatal Intensive Care UnitsAgder University College, Kristiansand, Norway, liv.fegran{at}hia.no
Oslo University College, Oslo, Norway
Oslo University College, Oslo, Norway Historically, the care of hospitalized children has evolved from being performed in isolation from parents to a situation where the parents and the child are regarded as a unit, and parents and nurses as equal partners in the childs care. Parents are totally dependent on professionals knowledge and expertise, while nurses are dependent on the childrens emotional connection with their parents in order to provide optimal care. Even when interdependency exists, nurses as professionals hold the power to decide whether and to what extent parents should be involved in their childs care. This article focuses on nurses responsibility to act ethically and reflectively in a collaborative partnership with parents. To illuminate the issue of nurses as moral practitioners, we present an observation of contemporary child care, and discuss it from the perspective of the Danish moral philosopher KE Løgstrup and his book The ethical demand.
Key Words: Løgstrup moral practice NICU nurses parents
Nursing Ethics, Vol. 13, No. 1,
52-64 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
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