Introduction to Law: Reading 1 Flashcards
________ is a “written law enacted by the legislature” that comes from a body of elected officials.
Statute
EX: Congress
________ is a “rule having the force of law issued by an administrative agency” and come from administrative agencies (usually groups of non-elected, although sometimes appointed, officials with expertise in the area of interest)
Regulation
EX: FDA and DEA (federal regulation), State board of pharmacy (state regulation)
________ are “a set of concepts and principles that guide us in determining what behavior helps or harms” others
Ethics
____________ is “the state of doing or producing good”
Beneficence
consequence-based principle which focus on the outcomes of a decision. Ex: an individual will often look for a result that benefits the patient regardless of the result to others.
________ is “the state of not doing harm or evil”
Nonmaleficence
consequence-based principle with similar moral connotations to beneficience - protecting the patient from harm and choosing the best option
___________ is “the ethical principle that actions are right insofar as they distribute benefits according to an “end-state” pattern”
Justice
often considered fairness or equitable; a duty-based principle which focuses not on outcomes of a decision, but on what we may owe an individual
___________ is “governing oneself according to one’s own system of morals and beliefs or life plan;” “the capacity for self-determiniation” or for someone to make decisions for themselves
Autonomy
duty-based principle; where we focus more on what we owe a person than on the consequences of a decision
___________ is “the state of being faithful, including obligations of loyalty and keeping promises and commitments”
________ is “ telling the truth in all situations”
Fidelity and veracity
both principles deal with honesty and are often applied interchangeably. duty-based principles where our obligation to our patient may outweigh the consequence of an action
___________ is “the system of action in which one person treats another the way a father treats a child, striving to promote the other’s good even aginst the other’s wishes”
Paternalism
the anti-thesis to respect for autonomy - “I know what’s best for the patient”