Abstract

Nurses encounter constraints, pressures and complexity in patient care which may increase reliance on implicit bias -- unconscious, mental shortcuts which shape attitudes and behavior (Kahneman, 2011). These cognitive shortcuts save time, but if unexamined, can undermine the ethical commitment to “respect…the inherent dignity, worth, unique attributes, and human rights of all individuals,” (ANA Code, 2015, p.1). This is especially concerning when considering vulnerable populations, such as families with children who are dependent on tracheostomy and mechanical ventilation (trach-vent-dependent). Studies of parent caregivers of children who are trach-vent-dependent raise questions of whether implicit bias contributes to the stigmatization these families experience. Practical strategies to activate the Code of Ethics with Interpretive Statements can mitigate the risks of stigmatization and vulnerability, resulting in improved shared decision making and care for these patients and families. An objective tool to guide patient- and family-centered inquiry and care can anchor nurses' ethical practice.

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