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2.
BMC Med Ethics ; 25(1): 67, 2024 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38849807

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Genetic research can yield information that is unrelated to the study's objectives but may be of clinical or personal interest to study participants. There is an emerging but controversial responsibility to return some genetic research results, however there is little evidence available about the views of genomic researchers and others on the African continent. METHODS: We conducted a continental survey to solicit perspectives of researchers, science policy makers and research ethics committee members on the feedback of individual genetic research findings in African genomics research. RESULTS: A total of 110 persons participated in the survey with 51 complete and 59 incomplete surveys received. Data was summarised using descriptive analysis. Overall, our respondents believed that individual genetic research results that are clinically actionable should be returned to study participants apparently because participants have a right to know things about their health, and it might also be a means for research participation to be recognized. Nonetheless, there is a need for development of precise guidance on how to return individual genetic research findings in African genomics research. DISCUSSION: Participants should receive information that could promote a healthier lifestyle; only clinically actionable findings should be returned, and participants should receive all important information that is directly relevant to their health. Nevertheless, detailed guidelines should inform what ought to be returned. H3Africa guidelines stipulate that it is generally considered good practice for researchers to feedback general study results, but there is no consensus about whether individual genomic study results should also be fed back. The decision on what individual results to feedback, if any, is very challenging and the specific context is important to make an appropriate determination.


Subject(s)
Ethics Committees, Research , Genetic Research , Genomics , Research Personnel , Humans , Research Personnel/ethics , Genomics/ethics , Genetic Research/ethics , Africa , Male , Female , Surveys and Questionnaires , Administrative Personnel/ethics , Adult , Feedback , Middle Aged , Black People/genetics
5.
Sci Eng Ethics ; 25(4): 1147-1165, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29721846

ABSTRACT

Corruption in the construction industry is a serious problem in China. As such, fighting this corruption has become a priority target of the Chinese government, with the main effort being to discover and prosecute its perpetrators. This study profiles the demographic characteristics of major incidences of corruption in construction. It draws on the database of the 83 complete recorded cases of construction related corruption held by the Chinese National Bureau of Corruption Prevention. Categorical variables were drawn from the database, and 'association rule mining analysis' was used to identify associations between variables as a means of profiling perpetrators. Such profiling may be used as predictors of future incidences of corruption, and consequently to inform policy makers in their fight against corruption. The results signal corruption within the Chinese construction industry to be correlated with age, with incidences rising as managers' approach retirement age. Moreover, a majority of perpetrators operate within government agencies, are department deputies in direct contact with projects, and extort the greatest amounts per case from second tier cities. The relatively lengthy average 6.4-year period before cases come to public attention corroborates the view that current efforts at fighting corruption remain inadequate.


Subject(s)
Construction Industry/economics , Construction Industry/ethics , Construction Industry/legislation & jurisprudence , Criminal Behavior , Demography , Administrative Personnel/economics , Administrative Personnel/ethics , Administrative Personnel/legislation & jurisprudence , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , China , Cities , Data Mining , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Statistics, Nonparametric
6.
J Med Ethics ; 44(11): 746-750, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30002142

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The principle of equivalence in prison health has been established for nearly four decades. It seeks to ensure that prisoners have access to the same level of healthcare as members of society at large, which is entrenched within the international legal framework and England's national health policies. AIMS: This study examined how key policymakers interpret and implement the principle of equivalence in English prisons. It also identified opportunities and threats associated with the application of the principle. METHODS: In total, 30 policymakers took part in this research. These participants engaged in policymaking activities and occupied positions of authority in the prison field. RESULTS: Despite the policymakers' consensus on the importance of the equivalence principle, there was a varying degree of understanding regarding what constitutes 'equivalence'. Participants described how the security culture impedes prisoners' access to healthcare services. Additionally, the increasing size and complexity of the prison population, coupled with a diminishing level of resources, reduce the level of care being provided in prisons and thus compromise implementation of equivalence in English prisons. CONCLUSIONS: Inconsistent interpretation of equivalence, the prevailing security drive, increasing numbers and health complexities of prisoners and fiscal austerity threaten the implementation of equivalence in English prisons. This research calls for new guidance on how to interpret and implement equivalence, along with measures to educate prison governors and staff on the prison rehabilitation value, ensure greater investment in prison health and consider alternatives to imprisonment to future-proof the principle of equivalence in the English prison system.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/standards , Health Services Accessibility/standards , Prisoners , Administrative Personnel/ethics , England , Ethics, Medical , Health Services Accessibility/ethics , Healthcare Disparities/ethics , Humans , Prisons/ethics
7.
BMC Health Serv Res ; 18(1): 608, 2018 08 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30081900

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: By tradition, the Swedish health care system is based on a representative and parliamentary form of government. Recently, new management forms, inspired by market principles, have developed. The steering system is both national and regional, in that self-governing county councils are responsible for the financing and provision of health care in different regions. National and local documents regulating Swedish health care mention several ethical values, such as equity in health for the whole population and respect for autonomy and human dignity. It is therefore of interest to investigate the status of such ethical statements in Swedish health care management. METHOD: The aim of the present study was to investigate perceptions of the status of ethics in the daily work of politicians, chief civil servants and Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) from care-giver organizations in the county council of Stockholm. A qualitative method was used, based on inductive content analysis of individual interviews with 13 health care managers. RESULTS: The content analysis resulted in four categories: Low status of ethics; Cost-effectiveness over ethics; Separation of ethics from management; and Lack of opportunities for ethical competence building. The informants described how they prioritized economic concerns over ethics and separated ethics from their daily work. They also expressed that they experienced that this development had been enforced by the marketization of the health care system. Further, they described how they lacked opportunities for ethical discussions, which could have helped develop their ethical competence. CONCLUSIONS: In order to improve the status of ethics in health care management, ethical considerations and analyses must be integrated in the regular work tasks of politicians, chief civil servants and CEOs; such as decision-making, budgeting and reform work. Further, opportunities for ethical dialogues on a regular basis should be organized, in order to improve ethical competence on the management level. New steering forms, less focused upon market principles, might also be needed, in order to improve the status of ethics in the health care management organization.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/ethics , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Government Employees , Caregivers , Decision Making/ethics , Health Facility Administrators , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Local Government , Politics , Qualitative Research , Sweden
8.
BMC Med Ethics ; 19(1): 20, 2018 03 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29514635

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There is a growing interest in aggregating more biomedical and patient data into large health data sets for research and public benefits. However, collecting and processing patient data raises new ethical issues regarding patient's rights, social justice and trust in public institutions. The aim of this empirical study is to gain an in-depth understanding of the awareness of possible ethical risks and corresponding obligations among those who are involved in projects using patient data, i.e. healthcare professionals, regulators and policy makers. METHODS: We used a qualitative design to examine Swiss healthcare stakeholders' experiences and perceptions of ethical challenges with regard to patient data in real-life settings where clinical registries are sponsored, created and/or used. A semi-structured interview was carried out with 22 participants (11 physicians, 7 policy-makers, 4 ethical committee members) between July 2014 and January 2015. The interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, coded and analysed using a thematic method derived from Grounded Theory. RESULTS: All interviewees were concerned as a matter of priority with the needs of legal and operating norms for the collection and use of data, whereas less interest was shown in issues regarding patient agency, the need for reciprocity, and shared governance in the management and use of clinical registries' patient data. This observed asymmetry highlights a possible tension between public and research interests on the one hand, and the recognition of patients' rights and citizens' involvement on the other. CONCLUSIONS: The advocation of further health-related data sharing on the grounds of research and public interest, without due regard for the perspective of patients and donors, could run the risk of fostering distrust towards healthcare data collections. Ultimately, this could diminish the expected social benefits. However, rather than setting patient rights against public interest, new ethical approaches could strengthen both concurrently. On a normative level, this study thus provides material from which to develop further ethical reflection towards a more cooperative approach involving patients and citizens in the governance of their health-related big data.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/ethics , Awareness , Community Participation , Datasets as Topic/ethics , Health Personnel/ethics , Moral Obligations , Patient Rights , Adult , Aged , Big Data , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Physicians , Qualitative Research , Registries/ethics , Social Control, Formal , Social Justice , Stakeholder Participation , Surveys and Questionnaires , Switzerland , Trust
9.
Healthc Manage Forum ; 30(6): 298-301, 2017 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29061075

ABSTRACT

Health leaders in Canada face a myriad of challenges with healthcare philanthropy-not just the practical question of how to be successful but also ethical questions. Is fundraising in partnership with companies that are implicated in the so-called lifestyle diseases appropriate? When does appropriate recognition for donors or volunteers cross the line into facilitating preferential access to care? Ethical decision-making in health philanthropy considers appropriate recognition or partnership in donor relations in the context of the public good with which healthcare institutions are entrusted and the fiduciary responsibilities of hospitals and clinicians to patients.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/ethics , Decision Making/ethics , Ethics, Professional , Fund Raising/ethics , Humans , Organizational Policy
13.
Am J Public Health ; 105(10): e68-75, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26270280

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We sought to learn how employees reacted to changes in the corporate narrative of Philip Morris Companies (PMC) in the late 1990s and early 2000s. METHODS: We analyzed archival internal tobacco industry documents about PMC's creation of a new corporate story. RESULTS: In response to litigation and public opprobrium, PMC replaced its market success-oriented corporate narrative with a new one centered on responsibility. Although management sought to downplay inconsistencies between the old and new narratives, some employees reportedly had difficulty reconciling them, concerned that the responsibility focus might affect company profitability. However, others embraced the new narrative, suggesting radical ideas to prevent youth smoking. These ideas were not adopted. CONCLUSIONS: PMC's new narrative was unconvincing to many of its employees, who perceived it either as a threat to the company's continued profits or as incongruous with what they had previously been told. As it had done with the public, PMC misled its employees in explaining a narrative repositioning that would help the company continue business as usual. Moving toward a tobacco endgame will require ongoing discursive and symbolic efforts to disrupt this narrative.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/ethics , Public Relations , Social Responsibility , Tobacco Industry/economics , Tobacco Industry/ethics , Humans , Organizational Culture , Organizational Objectives , Social Values , United States
16.
Harv Bus Rev ; 91(7-8): 76-81, 132, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24730172

ABSTRACT

The ability to persuade others to contribute to your efforts is a key skill for managers, for team members--for anyone who wants to elevate the probability of success. Research by leading social scientist Robert Cialdini has found that persuasion works by appealing to certain deeply rooted human responses: liking, reciprocity, social proof, commitment and consistency, authority, and scarcity. In this edited interview with HBR's executive editor, Cialdini expands on the six principles of persuasion and how leaders can make effective, authentic use of them in everyday business situations. He also previews findings from new research on the ethics of influence and how dishonesty affects individuals and the organization.


Subject(s)
Persuasive Communication , Power, Psychological , Administrative Personnel/ethics , Humans , Personnel Management , United States
17.
Am J Public Health ; 102(10): 1942-50, 2012 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22897536

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: We examined Philip Morris USA's exploration of corporate social responsibility practices and principles and its outcome. METHODS: We analyzed archival internal tobacco industry documents, generated in 2000 to 2002, related to discussions of corporate social responsibility among a Corporate Responsibility Taskforce and senior management at Philip Morris. RESULTS: In exploring corporate social responsibility, Philip Morris executives sought to identify the company's social value-its positive contribution to society. Struggling to find an answer, they considered dramatically changing the way the company marketed its products, apologizing for past actions, and committing the company to providing benefits for future generations. These ideas were eventually abandoned. Despite an initial call to distinguish between social and economic value, Philip Morris ultimately equated social value with providing shareholder returns. CONCLUSIONS: When even tobacco executives struggle to define their company's social value, it signals an opening to advocate for endgame scenarios that would encourage supply-side changes appropriate to the scale of the tobacco disease epidemic and consistent with authentic social value.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel , Social Responsibility , Social Values , Tobacco Industry/economics , Administrative Personnel/ethics , Administrative Personnel/psychology , Databases, Factual , Humans , Organizational Culture , Organizational Objectives , Tobacco Industry/ethics , United States
20.
Harv Bus Rev ; 89(4): 58-65, 137, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21510519

ABSTRACT

Companies are spending a great deal of time and money to install codes of ethics, ethics training, compliance programs, and in-house watchdogs. If these efforts worked, the money would be well spent. But unethical behavior appears to be on the rise. The authors observe that even the best-intentioned executives may be unaware of their own or their employees' unethical behavior. Drawing from extensive research on cognitive biases, they offer five reasons for this blindness and suggest what to do about them. Ill-conceived goals may actually encourage negative behavior. Brainstorm unintended consequences when devising your targets. Motivated blindness makes us overlook unethical behavior when remaining ignorant would benefit us. Root out conflicts of interest. Indirect blindness softens our assessment of unethical behavior when it's carried out by third parties. Take ownership of the implications when you outsource work. The slippery slope mutes our awareness when unethical behavior develops gradually. Be alert for even trivial infractions and investigate them immediately. Overvaluing outcomes may lead us to give a pass to unethical behavior. Examine good outcomes to ensure they're not driven by unethical tactics.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/ethics , Commerce/ethics , Humans , United States
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