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Patient Rights
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Patient rights is a foundational subject in health care education, bioethics, and nursing programs. It examines the legal, ethical, and professional obligations that health care providers owe to individuals in their care. The topic sits at the intersection of medicine, philosophy, and law, making it relevant across courses in health care management, professional ethics, and contemporary bioethics. What makes it academically compelling is the genuine tension it creates: providers must balance clinical judgment, institutional policy, patient autonomy, and family interests—often simultaneously and under pressure.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a range of approaches. Many focus on specific ethical principles such as informed consent, confidentiality, and the right to refuse treatment, including in complex cases involving mentally ill patients or minors seeking procedures like teenage breast augmentation. Others take a case-study approach, applying ethical frameworks to health care management scenarios or exploring the nurse's role as a patient advocate. Reflective and professional ethics essays also appear frequently, asking writers to examine their own responsibilities within clinical or institutional settings and to consider how social responsibility shapes ethical decision-making.

A strong essay on patient rights begins with a clearly bounded thesis—arguing a specific position rather than broadly surveying what rights exist. Evidence drawn from clinical ethics reasoning, legal standards around informed consent, and real or hypothetical case analysis tends to carry the most weight. Writers should ensure they engage with genuine conflicts, such as when a patient makes an irrational refusal of treatment, rather than presenting patient rights as straightforward. The most common pitfall is treating the topic descriptively without committing to an argued stance.

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Paper Doctorate
Ethical Theories in Nursing: A Comparative Overview
Moral philosophy has moved from addressing Plato's question of what makes the good person, to Kant's query as to the right thing to do, to Buber's concern with relationship. Whether referring to business ethics'…
Paper Undergraduate
Conversion therapy: practices, efficacy, and ethical concerns
Conversion therapy, also known as reparative therapy, is a pseudoscientific therapy that purports to be able to change the sexual orientation of a person (American Psychological Association, February 2008). It is controversial since it has had a long history of not only being largely unsuccessful in changing the sexual orientation of the person but also because it has frequently eventuated into depression. For that reason, California recently came out with a law banning conversion therapy for teenagers and children (Buchanan, 2012), but this decision has had both its proponents and critics. Proponents argue that the bill is long in order; critics argue that it has helped some people (sometimes including them). People should have a choice regarding whether or not they wish to change their sexual orientation, and the government cannot interfere with that privacy. This essay examines both sides of the story.
Essay Doctorate
Nursing Research HIPAA Proposal Patient Privacy Protection
Patient privacy protection is a cornerstone of any patient bill of rights and is a major goal of any nurse or medical professional. Without privacy, the basis of trust necessary to facilitate patient healing simply can not occur. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) increasingly dominates the nursing landscape. Safeguarding private patient information is not just important. It is the law. HIPAA provides federal protection for personal health information that is held by the affected organizations (and their contractors) and gives patients a wide spectrum of rights related to that information. Such organizations include health care providers (doctors, nurses, etc.), heath plans (insurance, HMOs, etc.) or health care clearinghouses (entities that process nonstandard information) or student records at universities. An organization is required to know if it is an entity covered by HIPAA in order to comply with the law. Once the records are no longer needed, their appropriate and secure disposal are the responsible of the health care provider or other applicable entity in the health care chain. Any unauthorized disclosure of the patient information is that entities responsibility. Comprehensive HIPAA training
Research Paper Doctorate
Improving the national health care system
Several years ago, health care reform was a hot political topic with President Bill Clinton's proposals to revolutionize medical health insurance. Even though his proposals didn't become law, sweeping changes are…
Paper Undergraduate
inservice teaching porfolio
One of the most pressing issues in nursing care is the development of protocols and standards for how to communicate with palliative care only patients the need to demonstrate rational end of life choices to the medical…
Research Paper Doctorate
Advocacy in nursing practice and patient care
Persons who choose nursing as a profession do so because they have a deep sense that they want to help others. Most do not do it because of pay incentives. Those who choose nursing for that reason are soon disillusioned…
Essay Doctorate
Case scenario analysis in ethics
Case Scenario: Ethics 1. State Regulations and Nursing Standards There's a clear nursing standard of practice that needs to be upheld in this case which is the act of following federal laws, largely the Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA). Passed by Congress in 1990, "the law mandates that in healthcare institutions that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding, patients must be informed in writing upon the admission of 1) their right to accept or refuse treatment, (2) their rights under existing state laws regarding advance directives, and (3) any policies the institution has regarding the with-holding or withdrawing of life sustaining treatments (Ulrich, 1999, p.9).
Research Paper Doctorate
Health care and ethics
Woman Clings to Hope of Having Dead Fiancee's Baby
Paper Masters
Confidentiality principles and practices
Case: Infected surgeon and a duty to disclose
Paper Doctorate
Neonatal Ethics and Have Presented
In this paper, I have described all sides of neonatal ethics and have presented my view regarding the topic. I have also managed to integrate philosophical and historical perspectives regarding neonatal care and ethics. In the end, I have given my personal opinion concerning the solution of the issues at stake. In this paper, I have described all sides of neonatal ethics and have presented my view regarding the topic. I have also managed to integrate philosophical and historical perspectives regarding neonatal care and ethics. In the end, I have given my personal opinion concerning the solution of the issues at stake.