•  41
    Nurse practitioner ethicist reconsidered: A nominally flawed proposition?
    with Pamela J. Grace, Aimee B. Milliken, and Marsha D. Fowler
    Nursing Ethics. forthcoming.
    In this paper we respectfully present a counter argument to Jesse Michael Kay’s thesis, as we understand it, in his article titled, “The Nurse Practitioner Ethicist: Distinct from a Nurse Ethicist?” Foundational to our analysis is that we take the distinction between nursing as a discipline and a practice profession, and clinical ethics as an emerging discipline seriously. The distinctions between them are well described in the literature. The two have different reasons for existence. While we a…Read more
  •  62
    After almost a year and a half of the COVID-19 pandemic, many healthcare institutions in the United States announced that they would mandate COVID-19 vaccination, with medical and religious exceptions, as a term of employment. The mandates resulted in widely publicized protests from hospital staff, including some nurses, who argued that these medical institutions violated the ethical principle of autonomy. As the world enters the “post-pandemic period,” decisions such as these, made during times…Read more
  •  56
    Nurse misinformation and the digital era: Abrogating professional responsibility
    with Pamela J. Grace
    Nursing Ethics 32 (3): 931-940. 2025.
    In the current digital era, reliance on technology for communication and the gathering and dissemination of information is growing. However, the information disseminated can be misleading or false. Nurses tend to be trusted by the public, but not all information brought to the public forum is well-informed. Ill-informed discussions have resulted in harm to individuals who take such information as fact and act on it. As technology continues to evolve and fact versus fiction becomes more challengi…Read more