However, when a person chooses to be a nurse, he or she has made a moral commitment to care for all patients. Such a decision to care is not to taken lightly, as it reflects this statement in the Code of Ethics for Nurses: “The nurse respects the worth, dignity and rights of all human beings irrespective of the nature of the health problem” (ANA, 2001, p. 7). Caring is required if a patient, such as Mr. Jones, has health consequences due to lack of adherence to a treatment plan for his diabetes and alcoholism. Putting aside personal biases and prejudices to implement Tronto’s (1993) four phases of caring is not easy. The four dimensions of care suggest “good care demands more than just good Intention; good care…is a practice of combining activities, attitudes, and knowledge of the situation” (Gastmans, 2006, p. 137). Care can be considered simply an ethical task and thus a burden of one more thing to do, or it can be considered a commitment to attending to and becoming enthusiastically involved in the patient’s needs.