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HOME > J Korean Acad Nurs > Volume 24(2); 1994 > Article
Original Article
Refusal of care by chronically and terminally ill patients: An ethical problem faced by nurses
Young Rhan Um, Yeo Shin Hong
The Journal of Nurses Academic Society 1994;24(2):190-205.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jnas.1994.24.2.190
Published online: March 30, 2017

Copyright © 1994 Korean Society of Nursing Science

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  • Respect for human life and respect for human dignity are two basic values to which organized nursing has urged its members to adhere in their service to mankind. Thus it is the nurses' duty to provide health care in support of sustenance of life and to pay respect for the patient's right to dignity. In practice, however, nurses may experience dilemmas between these duties much due to the development of modern advanced techniques. These dilemmas have become more complex and difficult to resolve. Nurses are often faced with situations in which the terminally ill refuse professional care, posing serious conflicts between respect for human life and respect for human rights to self-determination. In such cases, resolution of the problem is not a simple matter, thus requires intensive study into the ethical questions related to the situation. The purpose of this study was to identify ethical problems that nurses experience in caring for terminally ill patients and explore the ways to the resolution of problems within the context of the situations. The methodology used for the study was a case study method which 'New Casuistry' proposed by Jonsen and Toulmin(1988) and the 'Specified Principlism' proposed by Degrazia(1992) as an alternative to old deductive and intuitive method. Cases were developed through semistructured indepth interviews according to the casutistry method. A total of seven nurses were interviewd who were caring for therminally ill patients. Four cases out of a total 14 cases were related to the topic. Through the case analysis it became evident that nurses appreciated other values more often than respect for the patient's right to self-determination. These other values were convenience and effiency in nursing practice in case 1, preservation of life above all other values in case 2, provision of nursing care to fulfill the nurse's professional obligation at most in case 3, and respect for the family's demand against the patient's wish in case 4. This study showed that the most important ethical problems were conflict between respect for the patient's right to self-determination and sustenance of life for the fulfillment of professional obligation. For this problem, benefit/burden analysis from the perspective of the patient and family for the promotion of patient's wellbeing may be a way to resolve the conflict. Further, through these analysis it was shown that physicians' and families' opinions dominated in the decision? making and the opinions of nurses' and patients' tended not to be reflected. Thus the patient's right to his or her care was not readily respected. To solve this problem, nurses should make efforts to communicate reciprocally with their patients, family members and physicians in an effort to respect for their patient's rights to life and diginity from the point of view and values of the patient. It is also important that nurses provide good basic nursing care up to the time of death regardless of decisions about providing or not aggressive treatment for chronically and terminally ill patients.

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        Refusal of care by chronically and terminally ill patients: An ethical problem faced by nurses
        Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing. 1994;24(2):190-205.   Published online March 30, 2017
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