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Moral Distress in Pediatric Intensive Care Nurses: Experiences with the Death and Dying of Child Patients
DownloadFall 2020
Background: Moral distress has been commonly understood in the literature to be when one knows the right thing to do but being unable to realize it. Research has indicated the consequences of such an experience can deeply affect the individual. Critical care areas are fraught with ethical issues...
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Fall 2022
Background: There is a desperate need for research-based interventions to help minimize nurses’ moral distress, which arises when there is a conflict between what one thinks the morally correct action is and what they are required or capable of doing. While experiences and causes of moral...
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Fall 2009
In the penitential ethos of late fourteenth-century England, ideas about shame and guilt were of central concern. Preachers and poets, alike, considered questions such as: what role should shame have in contrition and penance? What is the precise relationship between physical purity and moral or...