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      Epistemic Injustice and Nurse Moral Distress: Perspective for Policy Development.

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          Abstract

          The focus of this article is epistemic injustice as an underlying explanation for the lack of communication associated with moral distress in frontline nurses who provide end-of-life care. Improvements in interprofessional collaboration and communication in this challenging area of practice are needed, as supported by research on moral distress and related studies. Policy development that addresses interprofessional practice inclusive of all healthcare providers, particularly frontline nurses, in deliberations about end-of-life treatment deliberations and decisions is proposed.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nurs Sci Q
          Nursing science quarterly
          SAGE Publications
          1552-7409
          0894-3184
          Jul 2015
          : 28
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Professor, The University of Arizona preed@arizona.edu.
          [2 ] Clinical Associate Professor, The University of Arizona.
          Article
          28/3/241
          10.1177/0894318415585634
          26109704
          d77d8d23-b95d-4845-b4ef-346e38da6f69
          © The Author(s) 2015.
          History

          end-of-life,epistemic injustice,frontline nurses,interprofessional communication,moral distress

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