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  1. Lying to patients with dementia: Attitudes versus behaviours in nurses.Daniela Cantone, Francesco Attena, Sabrina Cerrone, Antonio Fabozzi, Riccardo Rossiello, Laura Spagnoli & Concetta Paola Pelullo - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (4):984-992.
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  • Is it ever ethical for nurses to lie to patients.Anthony G. Tuckett - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (1):5-6.
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  • Is deception defensible in dementia care? A care ethics perspective.Yuanyuan Huang, Hui Liu & Yali Cong - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (7-8):1589-1599.
    Deception is common in dementia care, although its moral legitimacy is questionable. This paper conceptually clarifies when does dementia care involve deception and argues that care ethics is an appropriate ethical framework to guide dementia care compared with the mainstream ethical theories that emphasize abilities. From a perspective of care ethics, this paper claims that morally defensible deception is context-specific, embodied as a caring process that needs to be identified through instant, creative and interactive care procedures. According to this argument, (...)
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  • Ethical considerations of doll therapy for people with dementia.Gary Mitchell & Michelle Templeton - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (6):720-730.
    The use of doll therapy for people with dementia has been emerging in recent years. Providing a doll to someone with dementia has been associated with a number of benefits which include a reduction in episodes of distress, an increase in general well-being, improved dietary intake and higher levels of engagement with others. It could be argued that doll therapy fulfils the concepts of beneficence and respect for autonomy. However, some may believe that doll therapy is inappropriate when applied to (...)
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  • No playing around with robots? Ambivalent attitudes toward the use of Paro in elder care.Tenzin Wangmo, Vanessa Duong, Nadine Andrea Felber, Yi Jiao Tian & Emilian Mihailov - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry:e12645.
    This paper explores the ways in which health care professionals, family carers, and older persons expressed attitudes and opinions on using Paro, a social robot designed to stimulate patients with dementia. Thereafter, we critically evaluate existing prejudicial views toward Paro users to provide recommendations for its future use. Using an exploratory qualitative interview method, we recruited a total of 67 participants in Switzerland. They included 23 care professionals, 17 family carers, and 27 older persons. Data obtained were analyzed thematically. Study (...)
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  • A Tangled Web: Deception in Everyday Dementia Care.Rebecca Dresser - 2021 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 49 (2):257-262.
    Care workers and families often engage in deception in everyday interactions with people affected by dementia. While benevolent deception can be justified, there are often more respectful and less risky ways to help people with dementia seeking to make sense of their lives.
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  • Truth-telling to a cancer patient about poor prognosis: A clinical case report in cross-cultural communication.Mohammad Razai - 2018 - Clinical Ethics 13 (3):159-164.
    Ethical principles are not mere abstract concepts of academic interest. They have to be applied by care providers in the real world under complex, challenging and often perplexing conditions. This paper discusses, through the case of an ethnic minority patient with metastasis of bowel cancer, the ethical dilemma of truth-telling and withholding information about poor prognosis. It highlights the complexities of applying ethical principles in a different cultural milieu, reflecting on different ethical frameworks and justifications. The paper also discusses some (...)
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