Abstract
The response to suicidal clients is a recurrent and deep ethical problem in mental health practice. Rational suicide is rarely considered in relation to psychological suffering and is generally only discussed within the literature in connection with terminal illness. Focusing on a case example derived from a composite of patient experiences, this paper considers the premise that suicidal ideation may not be an irrational belief arising from mental disorder and analyses the ethical aspects of nursing care through the competing moral frameworks of the care-based and principle-based approaches to nursing ethics. We conclude that when the client is not capable of autonomous decision making, the two approaches lead to the same response. But when the client is capable of autonomous decision making, the two approaches lead to different responses. Specifically, from the care-based perspective, intervention to prevent suicide is easier to justify and helps formulate a nursing response, which promotes hope through the engagement.
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