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Becoming a Reflective Practitioner


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based on the idea of ‘the greatest good’ whereby the needs of the individual are in tension with the needs of society as a whole due to finite resources. Hence the healthcare practitioner is always concerned with managing resources to the best effect. It involves establishing priorities and pitching the need of the individual against the needs of many.

      Confidentiality, as enshrined with the data protection act (1998), aims to protect information about a patient being communicated to others without the patient’s permission. This potentially creates a dilemma for healthcare practitioners’ intent to care for relatives who are anxious for information that can easily lead to a breakdown of trust.

      Many writers have written about the nature of care and the demand that puts on carers to act for what is espoused as the ‘good’. Consider Logstrup’s (1997, p. 18) ethical demand:

      By our very attitude to one another we help to shape one another’s world. By our attitude to the other person we help to determine the scope and the hue of his or her world; we make it large and small, bright or drab, rich or dull, threatening or secure. We help to shape his or her world, not by theories and views but by our very attitude to him or her. Herein lies the unarticulated and one might say anonymous demand that we take care of the life which trust has placed into our hands.

      There is so much familiarity in talking about the alleged racial differences of non‐white people in public discourse and so little familiarity in talking about those racial properties attached to being white, that the concept of whiteness (or a recognition of racial formation) has little resonance within nursing (citing Jacobson 1998). While issues related to cultural difference are not ignored, they rarely include the difference specifically engendered by ‘whiteness’, which is structured to avoid and deflect interrogation or critical reflection.

      Kant’s moral imperative asserts ‘do as you would be done for’. However, this runs the risk of imposing your own values into the situation. For example, viewing an elderly patient ‘as if that was my mother’. The problem with this principle is that the patient is not your mother and that imposing such a position may be misguided because of identification and emotional entanglement.

      Following the ethical map trail

      1 Pose the question – did I/we act for the best,

      2 Consider different perspectives commencing with the practitioner’s own perspective,

      3 Consider which ethical principles apply in terms of the best decision,

      4 Consider what conflict exists between perspectives/values and how these might be resolved, and

      5 Consider authority relationships that determined action.