1. A client diagnosed with advanced stage lung cancer decides to refuse further chemotherapy
treatments, preferring to focus on palliative comfort care. The client's family strongly objects and
demands that the oncology team continue treatment. Which ethical principle is the nurse primarily
protecting when supporting the client's decision?
A. Beneficence
B. Autonomy
C. Non-maleficence
D. Justice
Correct Answer: B. Autonomy
Rationale: Autonomy represents the client's right to self-determination and to make decisions about their own
medical treatment, free from coercion. When a cognitively competent client decides to refuse chemotherapy, the
nurse must respect and protect this choice, even if the family disagrees. Beneficence (acting to benefit the client)
and non-maleficence (avoiding harm) are important, but the right of a competent individual to choose or refuse
care is rooted in autonomy.
2. An elderly client who is unable to communicate due to a severe stroke is grimacing and groaning
during repositioning. The nurse administers the ordered PRN intravenous pain medication. Which
ethical principle is the nurse demonstrating?
A. Autonomy
B. Beneficence
C. Veracity
D. Fidelity
Correct Answer: B. Beneficence
Rationale: Beneficence is the ethical duty to do good, promote the well-being of others, and actively prevent or
alleviate suffering. By recognizing signs of pain in a non-verbal client and administering pain medication to
relieve that suffering, the nurse is acting in the client's best interest and demonstrating beneficence.
3. A nurse is reviewing a client's morning medications and notes that a newly ordered drug has a
major interaction with the client's existing cardiac medication. The nurse holds the new drug and
contacts the prescribing physician. Which ethical principle is the nurse prioritizing?
A. Non-maleficence
B. Fidelity
C. Justice
D. Autonomy
Correct Answer: A. Non-maleficence
,Rationale: Non-maleficence is the foundational duty to "do no harm." By identifying a potentially dangerous drug-
drug interaction, withholding the medication, and clarifying the order with the physician, the nurse actively
prevents harm to the client. While fidelity involves duty to the client, the specific avoidance of clinical harm is the
core of non-maleficence.
4. During a localized disaster, a triage nurse must allocate scarce emergency resources and beds based
on objective clinical acuity scores rather than a client's social status, age, or ability to pay. Which
ethical principle is the nurse applying?
A. Beneficence
B. Fidelity
C. Justice
D. Veracity
Correct Answer: C. Justice
Rationale: Justice in healthcare refers to fairness, equity, and the impartial distribution of resources. Allocating
scarce beds and care based on objective, standardized clinical triage guidelines ensures that all clients are treated
fairly and without bias, fulfilling the requirements of distributive justice.
5. A nurse tells a post-operative client, "I will return with your pain medication in 15 minutes." The
nurse is delayed by an emergency but ensures another nurse delivers the medication on time, and later
checks in on the client. Which ethical principle did the nurse maintain?
A. Veracity
B. Fidelity
C. Autonomy
D. Beneficence
Correct Answer: B. Fidelity
Rationale: Fidelity refers to keeping promises, maintaining loyalty, and fulfilling professional commitments. By
promising to return within a specific time and ensuring the promise is kept (even by delegating when a conflict
arose), the nurse maintains the trust essential to the nurse-client relationship. Veracity is truthfulness, but keeping
a commitment is specifically fidelity.
6. A client's family requests that the nurse withhold a diagnosis of terminal pancreatic cancer from the
client, arguing that the news will cause the client to lose hope. The client asks the nurse directly, "Do I
have cancer? Please tell me the truth." Which ethical principle obligates the nurse to answer honestly?
A. Beneficence
B. Non-maleficence
C. Veracity
D. Fidelity
,Correct Answer: C. Veracity
Rationale: Veracity is the obligation to tell the truth and avoid deception. A competent client has the right to honest
information about their health status. The nurse must answer the client honestly, while providing supportive care,
rather than participating in a conspiracy of silence requested by the family.
7. A client who is a Jehovah's Witness is admitted with severe gastrointestinal bleeding and a
hemoglobin level of 5.2 g/dL. The physician orders a life-saving blood transfusion, but the client
refuses, citing religious beliefs. The nurse supports the client's decision. This scenario represents a
conflict between which two ethical principles?
A. Justice and Fidelity
B. Autonomy and Beneficence
C. Veracity and Non-maleficence
D. Autonomy and Veracity
Correct Answer: B. Autonomy and Beneficence
Rationale: This scenario highlights a classic conflict between autonomy (the client's right to refuse treatment
based on personal beliefs) and beneficence (the medical goal to perform a life-saving transfusion to do good).
Respect for autonomy takes priority when a competent adult makes an informed refusal.
8. A nurse decides to withhold information about a minor, non-critical lab variation from a highly
anxious client, stating, "I did this for the client's own good to prevent unnecessary panic." Which
behavior is the nurse demonstrating?
A. Beneficence
B. Paternalism
C. Veracity
D. Advocacy
Correct Answer: B. Paternalism
Rationale: Paternalism occurs when a healthcare professional makes decisions for a client without their consent,
under the assumption that they know what is best for the client. This restricts the client's autonomy and violates
the principle of truth-telling (veracity). While the nurse's intent may be well-meaning (preventing anxiety), the act
itself is paternalistic.
9. A nurse is assigned to care for an incarcerated client who is handcuffed to the bed under police
guard. The nurse provides the same high-quality, compassionate, and attentive care to this client as she
does to all others on the unit. Which ethical principle is the nurse upholding?
A. Autonomy
B. Justice
C. Fidelity
, D. Paternalism
Correct Answer: B. Justice
Rationale: The ethical principle of justice demands that all individuals receive fair, equitable, and unbiased
treatment, regardless of their social status, background, or legal standing. Providing equal care to an incarcerated
individual reflects clinical justice.
10. A physician orders a medication dosage that is three times the normal recommended limit. The
nurse recognizes the potential danger, refuses to administer the dose, and contacts the physician to
change the order. Which ethical principle is the nurse primarily enacting?
A. Non-maleficence
B. Veracity
C. Justice
D. Autonomy
Correct Answer: A. Non-maleficence
Rationale: The primary duty of the nurse when identifying an unsafe medication dosage is to prevent injury or
death, which directly aligns with non-maleficence (avoiding harm). Giving a known toxic or excessive dose would
violate this core duty.
11. A nurse is caring for a famous local politician. A colleague who is not involved in the client's care
asks the nurse for details about the politician's diagnosis. The nurse refuses to share any details, citing
confidentiality. Which ethical principle is the nurse demonstrating?
A. Justice
B. Fidelity
C. Autonomy
D. Veracity
Correct Answer: B. Fidelity
Rationale: Fidelity involves honoring commitments and professional obligations, which includes safeguarding
client privacy and maintaining strict confidentiality of medical records as promised by professional codes of
conduct. Sharing this information would violate trust and fidelity.
12. A 15-year-old client with leukemia agrees to participate in a clinical trial after the nurse explains
the study in age-appropriate terms. While the parents provide the legal consent, the nurse ensures the
adolescent provides written agreement as well. What is the adolescent's agreement called?
A. Informed Consent
B. Assent
C. Advocacy
D. Paternalism