Medical assistance in dying : a review of Canadian nursing regulatory documents

Article

PESUT, Barbara | THORNE, Sally | STAGER, Megan L. | SCHILLER, Catharine J. | PENNEY, Christine | HOFFMAN, Carolyn | GREIG, Madeleine | ROUSSEL, Josette

Canada's legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) in 2016 has had important implications for nursing regulators. Evidence indicates that registered nurses perform key roles in ensuring high-quality care for patients receiving MAiD. Further, Canada is the first country to recognize nurse practitioners as MAiD assessors and providers. The purpose of this article is to analyze the documents created by Canadian nursing regulatory bodies to support registered nurse and nurse practitioner practice in the political context of MAiD. A search of Canadian provincial and territorial websites retrieved 17 documents that provided regulatory guidance for registered nurses and nurse practitioners related to MAiD. Responsibilities of registered nurses varied across all documents reviewed but included assisting in assessment of patient competency, providing information about MAiD to patients and families, coordinating the MAiD process, preparing equipment and intravenous access for medication delivery, coordinating and informing health care personnel related to the MAiD procedure, documenting nursing care provided, supporting patients and significant others, and providing post death care. Responsibilities of nurse practitioners were identified in relation to existing legislation. Safety concerns cited in these documents related to ensuring that nurses understood their boundaries in relation to counseling versus informing, administering versus aiding, ensuring safeguards were met, obtaining informed consent, and documenting. Guidance related to conscientious objection figured prominently across documents. These findings have important implications for system level support for the nursing role in MAiD including ongoing education and support for nurses' moral decision making.

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1527154419845407

Voir la revue «Policy, politics and nursing practice»

Autres numéros de la revue «Policy, politics and nursing practice»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Medical assistance in dying : a review of Can...

Article indépendant | PESUT, Barbara | Policy, politics and nursing practice

Canada's legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) in 2016 has had important implications for nursing regulators. Evidence indicates that registered nurses perform key roles in ensuring high-quality care for patients rece...

Medical assistance in dying : a review of Can...

Article indépendant | PESUT, Barbara | Policy, politics and nursing practice

Canada's legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) in 2016 has had important implications for nursing regulators. Evidence indicates that registered nurses perform key roles in ensuring high-quality care for patients rece...

The rocks and hard places of MAiD : a qualita...

Article indépendant | PESUT, Barbara | BMC nursing | vol.19

Background: Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) was legalized in Canada in June, 2016. The Canadian government's decision to legislate assisted dying, an approach that requires a high degree of obligation, precision, and delegation...

De la même série

Medical assistance in dying : a review of Can...

Article | PESUT, Barbara | Policy, politics and nursing practice

Canada's legalization of Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) in 2016 has had important implications for nursing regulators. Evidence indicates that registered nurses perform key roles in ensuring high-quality care for patients rece...

The construction of British Columbia's pallia...

Article | ELLIOTT, Carly | Policy, politics and nursing practice

Nurses have a critical role to play in creating, implementing, critiquing, and advancing health policy within diverse contexts to ensure people living with life-limiting illness receive equitable and ethical access to palliative c...

Chargement des enrichissements...