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  1. Jul 14, 2009 · For further general information about ethical and legal risk in personality assessment, readers are referred to Weiner and Greene (2008, chap. 3) and specific attention by Koocher to forensic assessment of children and adolescents, by Barnett and Dunning to assessing the elderly, and by Brabender and Bricklin and Turchik, Karpenko, Hammers, and McNamara to conducting assessments in diverse ...

    • ACCOUNTABILITY. Per the American Nursing Association’s Code of Ethics, professional accountability, one of the important ethical principles in nursing is defined as "being answerable to oneself and others for one's own actions."
    • AUTONOMY. Autonomy is another one of the essential ethical principles in nursing. It refers to a nurse's ability to act according to their knowledge and judgment while providing nursing care within their scope of practice.
    • BENEFICENCE. Beneficence, another one of the important ethical principles in nursing is defined as charity and kindness and is demonstrated by nursing actions that benefit others.
    • FIDELITY. Another one of the main ethical principles in nursing is fidelity. Fidelity is the act of being faithful and keeping one's promises.
  2. Nine Provisions of the ANA Nursing Code of Ethics. Provision 1: The nurse practices with compassion and respect for the inherent dignity, worth, and unique attributes of every person. Provision 2: The nurse’s primary commitment is to the patient, whether an individual, family, group, community, or population.

    • 2022
  3. Topics include informed consent, confidentiality, the involvement of third parties in assessment, external consequences, test construction, test revisions, obsolete tests and outdated test results, cultural competence, test data and test security, assessment in the digital age, as well as the less frequently addressed topic of report writing and providing assessment feedback.

  4. Aug 14, 2023 · Ethical values are essential for any healthcare provider. Ethics comes from the Greek word “ethos,” meaning character. Ethical values are universal rules of conduct that provide a practical basis for identifying what kinds of actions, intentions, and motives are valued.[1] Ethics are moral principles that govern how the person or a group will behave or conduct themselves. The focus ...

    • Lisa M. Haddad, Robin A. Geiger
    • 2023/08/14
    • 2018
  5. Feb 22, 2016 · This chapter discusses the ethical issues involved in personality assessment under various contexts in the light of the ethical guidelines established by different professional associations, and emphasizes the need to progressively evolve and refine standards for psychological assessment.

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  7. Nov 15, 2024 · The book contributes to ‘the internationalisation of care ethics’ (p. 3), which addresses critiques such as anthropocentrism of care ethics and the centrality of politics to care ethics: ‘Care ethics uncovers the fact that caring and being cared for are practices that are crucially political in nature’.

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