The need to value patient autonomy and integrity
This practice helped me to understand the need to value patient autonomy and integrity, compassion, justice, non-malice, empathy, fairness, professionalism, and cooperation in the field of Pharmacy. When the patient discussed their interactions with pharmacists and their clients and with pharmacists, medical practitioners, and other health workers, I felt the need for more effective ethical relationships.
In other words, regardless of position, the activity showed responsibility for the creation and accomplishment of mutual objectives. This encouraged me to use creative thinking to see new ways to achieve professional goals. It also revealed values and conduct that correlate to the faith that patients, other healthcare providers, and society have placed in the profession.
Some of the patient’s symptoms include unconscious behavior, hypnogogic delusions, excessive sleepiness, and cataplexy. The man, when talking about his encounter with a pharmacist, seemed to have a medical condition that caused both strong emotion and humor, but was still aware of a sudden physical fall. The first step in mitigating their effect was to uncover the patient’s harmful behavior. I could not change what they do in the future, but I can change what I do with it and any idea these patients might get away within my life. The important thing I know from this experience is that social factors such as old age, race, and social class influence the expectations of patients.
On the other hand, I have learned to understand and adapt a range of behaviors, build up relationships and empathy, change the environment, and initially discuss emotion. I will have to explore the root cause of patient behavior, focus on future performance, and develop a solution that is agreed upon with the Expert Team to demonstrate these conducts in the future.