ACHSA Code of Ethics Preface A code of ethics is a set of principles, which guides the conduct of a group of professionals and establishes moral duties and obligations in relation to clients, institutions and society. One of the characteristics of a professional association is the development and adoption of a code of ethics. The American Correctional Health Services Association (ACHSA) undertook the development of a code of ethics through a consultative process which included a membership survey, workshops and adoption of a provisional set of principles in 1990. The objective of the process were to identify fundamental values of correctional health professionals and ethical conflicts in the correctional health care setting. Distinctive features about a code of ethics for correctional health professionals became apparent. Correctional health professionals represent many health care disciplines: doctors, nurses, mid-level practitioners, psychologists. Pharmacists, social workers, nutritionists, health information specialists, administrators, Codes of ethics are, in most cases, developed for a single professional discipline. Nonetheless, there are fundamental values that extend across health professional disciplines, especially in relation to duties and obligations towards patients. It is the correctional institution that creates the need for a unique code of ethics for correctional health professionals. The fundamental values of correctional health professionals in relation to the institution do not arise from the culture and experience of health professionals. The duties and obligations towards the institution generated much discussion and debate during the consultation. The ACHSA code of ethics does not emerge in a vacuum. There are the codes of ethics of the professional disciplines. There are also international principles of law and ethics, such as the World Medical Association Declaration of Tokyo, the United Nations Principles of Medical Ethics, the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners and the International Council of Nurses Statement of the Role of the Nurse in Care of Detainees and Prisoners. Preamble Correctional health professionals are obligated to respect human dignity and act in ways that merit trust and prevent harm. They must ensure autonomy in decisions about their inmate patients and promote a safe environment. Principles The correctional health professional should: