Providing nursing care in the home sometimes means clinical priorities to mind the gap between heavy workload and staff shortages [10].
This requires nurses to adapt to current situations that demand ethical maturity.
According to Gaut [12], caring is ethical in and of itself. Therefore, it is important that caring needs to recognize and focus on providing necessary, interpersonal, and intersubjective conditions for the development of a sense of security that people in need of nursing care seek and need. Person-centred care is an established tradition in nursing [13], which entails e.g. seeing the person behind the patient [14] and facilitating empowerment and shared decision-making [15]. This not only enhances improved quality of life for care receivers,
but it may also lead to better job satisfaction for care providers.