@article{oai:jrckicn.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000807, author = {YANAI, Keiko and 柳井, 圭子}, issue = {6}, journal = {人間と医療, Journal of humanities in medicine}, month = {Sep}, note = {application/pdf, Forensic nursing practice adds the medico-legal perspective to the competencies acquired through nursing education. To deliver care to patients who have suffered mental abuse and to advocate for the rights of patients and clients, forensic nurses need to have the skills and competencies to cope with legal and ethical problems. Using data from an interview with Dr. Virginia Lynch, this paper examines the four principles of bioethics (autonomy, justice, beneficence, and nonmaleficence) in light of the four scopes of ethics for forensic nursing practice proposed by the International Association of Forensic Nursing: Fidelity to patients and clients, responsibility to the public, obligation to science, dedication to colleagues. Recognition of the discipline of forensic nursing has just started in Japan, thus forensic nursing practice is still very limited. Consideration of a framework for ethical decision making is of capital importance for the development of forensic nursing practice., 研究論文}, pages = {24--31}, title = {フォレンジック看護実践における倫理的判断の枠組み : 4つの範囲}, year = {2016}, yomi = {ヤナイ, ケイコ} }