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Sunday, December 23, 2018

'Promise vs. Duty in Nursing Essay\r'

'According to Merriam-Webster Dictionary (1997), the definition of a promise is â€Å"a support to do or not to do something specified.” For the sake of not sounding akin a bunch of politicians who seldom slide by their rhetorical promises, I think we should alter the word to something more honorable such(prenominal) as to duty. Duty, according to Merriam-Webster Dictionary (1997) is â€Å" parcel out or action required by one’s occupation or position”. That is much more fitting. Promises discount be made and broken by individuals. A duty is inherent in the position one holds. Promises are a voluntary commitment. A duty is an honorable standard or obligation that applies to a position or occupation. Dorman and Middaugh, (2009) stated that â€Å" perennial gaps between promises and performance create doubt, distrust, and eventually cynicism in the public”.\r\nInstilling a wizard of duty in a profession is much different. I expect a duty to treat pat ients on a lower floor my care with dignity and extol. I do not have to promise to do this. It is inherent in my position and I need to do this. This is stated nicely by the International Council of Nurses, (2006) â€Å"inherent in nursing is respect for human rights, the rights to biography and choice, to dignity and to be treated with respect”. The public wants care givers with a gumption of duty, not a promise. Otherwise we may fall into the same category of politicians that cannot be trusted. I think that this is important in order to maintain the image that nursing currently has as a fondness and trustworthy profession (Gray, 1999). Having a sense of duty links directly to the American Nurses Association (ANA) code of ethics as my nursing professional obligation or if you wish, promise to patients, community and society (see Nursingworld.org, legislation of Ethics).\r\nReferences\r\nDorman,D., & Middaugh, D.(2009). Promise keeping: do we keep our promises. Meds urg Nursing, 18(1).\r\nâ€Å"Duty.” The Merriam-Webster Dictionary (1997).Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. Gray,B.B.,(1999). Public horizon poll reveals consumer attitudes or so\r\nnursing. Nurseweek.com. Retieved from nurseweek.com/features/99-7/hpoll.html\r\nInternational Council of Nurses (ICN) (2006). Retrieved from: http://www.icn.ch/images/stories/documents/about/icncode_english.pdf â€Å"Promise.” The Merriam-Webster Dictionary (1997).Merriam-Webster, Incorporated.\r\n'

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