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Nursing EthicsEthical Dimensions in Nursing Care for Individuals with Intellectual Disabilities

Individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) face significant healthcare disparities compounded by ethical and legal complexity. Nurses consistently report feeling underprepared to navigate informed consent, autonomy, and restrictive practices with this growing, increasingly long-lived population.


⚖️ Clinical Considerations

  • Informed consent requires accessible formats: simplified language, visual aids, and alternative communication strategies are standard of care
  • Overuse of restraints and sedation with IDD patients raises serious human rights and ethical concerns
  • Diagnostic overshadowing delays recognition of symptoms, creating barriers to equitable end-of-life care
  • Caregivers provide critical insight into nonverbal patients’ preferences and should be actively included in care planning

🎯 Practice Applications

  • Adapt communication using plain language, visual supports, and nonverbal cue assessment for every IDD patient encounter
  • Assess decision-making capacity before assuming a patient cannot participate in their own care decisions
  • Document the consent process thoroughly, including accommodations made and who participated
  • Advocate for interdisciplinary care conferences when ethical or legal dilemmas arise around treatment decisions

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