Code of Maryland Regulations
Title 10 - MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
Part 4
Subtitle 27 - BOARD OF NURSING
Chapter 10.27.19 - Code of Ethics
Section 10.27.19.02 - Ethical Responsibilities
Universal Citation: MD Code Reg 10.27.19.02
Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 19, September 20, 2024
A. A nurse shall:
(1) Provide services with
respect for human dignity and the uniqueness of a client unrestricted by
consideration of social or economic status, religious affiliation, personal
attributes, or the nature of health problems;
(2) Safeguard a client's right to privacy by
maintaining confidentiality of information;
(3) Act to safeguard a client and the public
if health care and safety are affected by the incompetent, unethical, or
illegal practice of any person;
(4)
Promptly report a breach of confidentiality or privacy;
(5) Assume responsibility and accountability
for individual nursing judgments and actions;
(6) Maintain competence in nursing;
(7) Exercise informed judgment and use
individual competence and qualifications as criteria in seeking consultation,
accepting responsibilities, and delegating nursing activities to others;
and
(8) Inform the Board regarding
unethical conduct by another licensed nurse.
B. A nurse may not, when acting in the capacity or identity of a licensed nurse:
(1)
Knowingly participate in or condone dishonesty, fraud, deceit, or
misrepresentation;
(2) Engage or
participate in an action that violates or diminishes the civil or legal rights
of a client;
(3) Perform new
techniques and procedures without adequate education and practice;
(4) Assume duties and responsibilities in the
practice of nursing without adequate preparation or without maintaining
competency;
(5) Practice nursing if
unfit to perform procedures or make decisions because of physical or mental
impairment, including, but not limited to, the effects of prescription
drugs;
(6) If engaged in research,
coerce or pressure a subject to participate or continue to participate in the
research; or
(7) Abandon a
client.
C. A nurse may not engage in behavior that dishonors the profession whether or not acting in the capacity or identity of a licensed nurse, including, but not limited to:
(1) Verbal abuse, including use of racial or
ethnic slurs, directed toward a coworker, employer, Board staff member, client,
or client's family member;
(2)
Physically abusing, threatening, or intimidating a coworker, employer, Board
staff member, client, or client's family member;
(3) Deceiving, defrauding, or stealing from a
coworker, employer, client, or client's family member;
(4) Diverting any medication or providing
false or misleading information to an authorized prescriber or a pharmacist to
obtain or attempt to obtain any medication;
(5) Knowingly employing another person to
practice or engage in or attempt to practice or engage in an occupation or
profession licensed under this title if the employee is not licensed to do so
under Health Occupations Article, Title 8, Annotated Code of
Maryland;
(6) Performing acts
beyond the authorized scope of the level of nursing practice for which the
individual is licensed;
(7)
Obtaining or copying any part of a client's health record for purposes other
than:
(a) Providing health care to the
client;
(b) Conducting quality
improvement activities;
(c)
Complying with legal requirements such as a subpoena; or
(d) Allowing a nursing student to use records
for educational purposes if client identification has been redacted or
disguised;
(8) Using,
possessing, supplying, administering, or attempting to use, possess, supply, or
administer prescription drugs or controlled dangerous substances without valid
medical indication;
(9) Reporting
for employment under the influence of alcohol or a controlled dangerous
substance or submitting a pre-employment sample that is positive for alcohol or
a controlled dangerous substance without having provided evidence of valid
prescriptions for all controlled dangerous substances in the sample;
(10) Reporting for employment under the
influence of an illicit drug or submitting a pre-employment sample that is
positive for an illicit drug;
(11)
Using the power, influence, or knowledge, inherent in or obtained during the
nurse-patient relationship, for the nurse's personal gratification or
benefit;
(12) Engaging in
unprofessional or immoral conduct;
(13) Misrepresenting or concealing a material
fact in obtaining a license, renewing a license, or reinstating a license; or
(14) Committing an act of moral
turpitude, dishonesty, or corruption when the act directly or indirectly
affects the health, welfare, or safety of the citizens of this State, and, if
the act constitutes a crime, conviction thereof in a criminal proceeding is not
a condition precedent to disciplinary action.
D. A nurse may not engage in sexual misconduct. Sexual misconduct includes, but is not limited to:
(1) Sexual behavior with a client in the
context of a professional evaluation, treatment, procedure, or service to the
client, regardless of the setting in which the professional service is
rendered;
(2) Sexual behavior with
a client under the pretext of diagnostic or therapeutic intent or
benefit;
(3) Solicitation of a
sexual relationship, whether consensual or nonconsensual, with a
client;
(4) Sexual advances toward,
or the request of sexual favors from, a patient coworker, student, employer,
client, or client's family member;
(5) Discussion of nontherapeutic sexual
matters while treating a client;
(6) Taking photographs of a client for a
sexual purpose;
(7) Sexual
harassment of a coworker, student, employer, client, or client's family
member;
(8) Sexual contact with an
incompetent or unconscious client;
(9) Intentionally exposing any of the nurse's
sexual body parts; and
(10)
Intentionally exposing any of the client's sexual body parts for a
nontherapeutic purpose.
E. Electronic devices, including but not limited to telephones, may not be used to record medical records and take pictures or videos of clients without written client authorization.
F. A nurse:
(1) May not make use of electronic devices
and social media to transmit or place any client information online; and
(2) Shall adhere to the following
principles for the use of electronic devices and social media:
(a) Every nurse has an obligation to
understand the nature, benefits, and consequences of the use of electronic
devices and participating in social media networking;
(b) Nurses are bound to observe ethically
prescribed clientnurse boundaries online as in any other setting;
(c) Client information shall be maintained in
separate encrypted and secured files on personal computers and online;
(d) A nurse has an obligation to
report any electronically generated material that could harm a client's privacy
rights; and
(e) The standards of
professionalism are the same when using electronic devices and social media as
in any other circumstance.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Maryland may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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