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Partiality and Justice in Nursing Care examines the conflicting
normative claims of partiality and impartiality in nursing care,
looking in depth at how to reconcile reasonable concerns for one
particular patient with equally important concerns for the
maximisation of health-related welfare for all with relevant
nursing-care needs, in a resource-limited setting. Drawing on moral
philosophy, this book explores how discussions of partiality and
impartiality in moral philosophy can have relevance to the
professional context of clinical nursing care as well as in nursing
ethics in general. It develops a framework for normative nursing
ethics that incorporates a notion of permissible partiality, and
specifies which concerns an ethics of nursing care should entail
when balancing partialist and impartialist concerns. At the same
time, Nordhaug argues that this partiality must also be constrained
by both principled and context-sensitive assessments of patients'
needs, as well as of the role-relative deontological restriction of
minimising harm, something that could be mitigated by institutional
and organisational arrangements. This thought-provoking volume is
an important contribution to nursing ethics and philosophy.
Partiality and Justice in Nursing Care examines the conflicting
normative claims of partiality and impartiality in nursing care,
looking in depth at how to reconcile reasonable concerns for one
particular patient with equally important concerns for the
maximisation of health-related welfare for all with relevant
nursing-care needs, in a resource-limited setting. Drawing on moral
philosophy, this book explores how discussions of partiality and
impartiality in moral philosophy can have relevance to the
professional context of clinical nursing care as well as in nursing
ethics in general. It develops a framework for normative nursing
ethics that incorporates a notion of permissible partiality, and
specifies which concerns an ethics of nursing care should entail
when balancing partialist and impartialist concerns. At the same
time, Nordhaug argues that this partiality must also be constrained
by both principled and context-sensitive assessments of patients'
needs, as well as of the role-relative deontological restriction of
minimising harm, something that could be mitigated by institutional
and organisational arrangements. This thought-provoking volume is
an important contribution to nursing ethics and philosophy.
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