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1.
Agri ; 36(3): 181-193, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38985104

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study is to develop the 'Developing an Ethical Attitude Scale for Pain Management in Nursing' to assign the ethical attitudes of nurses in pain management. METHODS: The population of the study comprised nurses (n=411) working in a university hospital in Izmir. The Ethical Attitude Scale in Nursing Pain Management was developed in five sub-dimensions: 'Care and Dignity,' 'Ethical Values,' 'Attitude,' 'Rights,' and 'Pain Management.' This scale was created by examining many research studies related to pain management in nursing in the literature and taking expert opinions. 'The Ethical Attitude Scale in Nursing Pain Management' initially consisted of 36 items. After expert opinions and validity analyses, the draft scale was reduced to 34 items, and then reliability analysis further reduced the scale to 23 items. RESULTS: In the validity and reliability study of 'The Ethical Attitude Scale in Nursing Pain Management,' the total Cronbach's alpha value of the scale was 0.86. The Cronbach's alpha value for the 'Care and Dignity' sub-dimension was 0.88; for the 'Ethical Values' sub-dimension, it was 0.83; for the 'Attitude' sub-dimension, it was 0.86; for the 'Rights' sub-dimension, it was 0.79; and for the 'Pain Management' sub-dimension, it was 0.72. CONCLUSION: According to these data, it was determined that 'The Ethical Attitude Scale in Nursing Pain Management' is a valid and reliable scale.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Ethics, Nursing , Pain Management , Humans , Female , Reproducibility of Results , Male , Adult , Surveys and Questionnaires , Turkey , Psychometrics , Middle Aged , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology
2.
BMC Med Ethics ; 25(1): 70, 2024 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38890687

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The nursing profession considers conscience as the foundation and cornerstone of clinical practice, which significantly influences professional decision-making and elevates the level of patient care. However, a precise definition of conscience in the nursing field is lacking, making it challenging to measure. To address this issue, this study employed the hybrid approach of Schwartz Barcott and Kim to analyze the concept of conscience-based nursing care. METHODS: This approach involves a three-phase process; theoretical, fieldwork, and analytical. A systematic literature review was conducted using electronic databases during the first phase to find relevant papers. The content of 42 articles that met the inclusion criteria was extracted to determine the attributes, antecedents, and consequences of consciousness care using thematic analysis. Based on the working definition as a product of this phase, the plan of doing the fieldwork phase was designed. During this phase, data were collected through interviews with nurses all of whom were responsible for patient care in hospitals. In this phase, 5 participants were chosen for in-depth interviewing by purposeful sampling. Data were analyzed using directed content analysis. The findings of the theoretical and fieldwork phases were integrated and the final definition was derived. RESULTS: The integration of the theoretical and fieldwork phases resulted in identifying four key characteristics of conscience-based nursing care. Firstly, it involves providing professional care with a conscientious approach. Secondly, ethics is at the core of conscience-based care. Thirdly, external spirituality plays a significant role in shaping one's conscience in this context. Finally, conscience-based nursing care is both endogenous and exogenous, with professional commitment being the central focus of care. CONCLUSION: Conscience-based nursing care is an essential component of ethical care, which elevates clinical practice to professional care. It requires the integration of individual and social values, influenced by personal beliefs and cultural backgrounds, and supported by professional competence, resources, and a conducive organizational atmosphere in the healthcare field. This approach leads to the provision of responsive care, moral integrity, and individual excellence, ultimately culminating in the development of professionalism in nursing.


Subject(s)
Conscience , Nursing Care , Humans , Nursing Care/ethics , Attitude of Health Personnel , Ethics, Nursing , Concept Formation
3.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 212-214, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836484

ABSTRACT

Current healthcare practices are geared toward standardized policies and procedures that are intended to guide the practice of all members of the healthcare professions, especially the practice of nurses. Instead of using predefined practices, nurses often choose shortcuts or workarounds to complete daily work in healthcare institutions. Are the shortcuts considered ethical for nurse practice or for members of the discipline of nursing? This article begins an ethical straight-thinking discussion on the conflicting values and implications for those who offer professional nurse services and those who receive these services.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Nursing , Humans
5.
J Christ Nurs ; 41(3): 178-183, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38853318

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Sister Simone Roach, a noted philosopher of caring in nursing, left behind a significant body of theoretical and practical work highlighting the areas of nursing ethics, care/caring, and compassion. This article explores the integration of the moral foundation of agape love in Pauline theology and Roach's human caring in nursing (1992) as the action of agape love. A narrative literature review explores the relationship between the scriptural ethics of St. Paul (Pauline ethics) and Roach's caring in nursing.


Subject(s)
Christianity , Empathy , Humans , History, 20th Century , Philosophy, Nursing , Ethics, Nursing , Nursing Care/psychology , Nurse-Patient Relations
7.
Nurs Sci Q ; 37(3): 230-236, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836491

ABSTRACT

I propose that moral distress may function as a moral heuristic, and one that misses its mark in signifying a fundamental source for nurses' moral suffering. Epistemic injustice is an insidious workplace wrongdoing that is glossed over or avoided in explicit explanations for nurse moral suffering and is substituted by an emphasis on the nurse's own wrongdoing. I discuss reasons and evidence for considering moral distress as a moral heuristic that obfuscates the role of epistemic injustice as a fundamental constraint on nurses' moral reasoning underlying moral suffering.


Subject(s)
Heuristics , Morals , Humans , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Ethics, Nursing , Nurses/psychology
10.
J Contin Educ Nurs ; 55(6): 279-281, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38815242

ABSTRACT

A crucial domain of professional identity in nursing is the area of values and ethics. Comprising a set of core values and principles, values and ethics are used to guide nurse conduct. Professional development specialists can use the nursing code of ethics and organizational structure and examples to teach nurses the values and ethics domain of professional identity in nursing. [J Contin Educ Nurs. 2024;55(6):279-281.].


Subject(s)
Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Male , Adult , Female , Middle Aged , Education, Nursing, Continuing/organization & administration , Codes of Ethics , Social Identification , Curriculum , Nurse's Role/psychology , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Nursing Staff, Hospital/ethics , Social Values
11.
Nurs Philos ; 25(3): e12484, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38739847

ABSTRACT

Overtaxed by the realities laid bare in the pandemic, nursing has imminent decisions to make. The exigencies of pandemic times overextend a health care infrastructure already groaning under the weight of inequitable distribution of resources and care commodified for profit. We can choose to prioritise different values. Invoking philosopher of science Isbelle Stengers's manifesto for slow science, this is not the only nursing that is possible. With this paper, I pick up threads of nursing's historical ontology, drawing previous scholarship on the historical narratives nurses use to understand themselves. Peeling back nursing's myth to alternate points of origin allows me to consider alternate lines of flight, a speculative adventure in paths not taken but paths that exist nonetheless. I go on to examine what a collective ethic of nursing could be, when we make space for these alternate histories, considering the confluences and conflicts that enable nurses to care and those that inhibit them from doing so. The imperative for this lies in the central importance of the reproductive labour of nursing health care, which leads me to a critique of nursing's capitulation to the pressures of late stage capitalism. This is a problem with ethical and ontological implications both for nursing, and also for those who require nursing care, an imperative to think about the kinds of present/futures for health, care, and health care we might cocreate in collaboration and solidarity with the communities in which nurses are imbricated, shedding the trappings of neoliberalism. There is significant power in the vision and praxis of 28 million nurses and midwives worldwide. Our ethics can guide our imagination which can in turn create possibility. This kind of endeavour-that of dreams and imagination-leads us to what could be, if only we leap.


Subject(s)
Politics , Humans , Ethics, Nursing , Uncertainty , Pandemics , COVID-19/nursing
12.
J Nurs Adm ; 54(6): 353-360, 2024 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38767526

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to describe differences in nurse leaders' ethical decision-making confidence and their professional values based on identified characteristics and to explore the relationship between ethical decision making and professional values. BACKGROUND: Nurse leaders have multiple duties and obligations toward their patients, other staff, and the organizations where they work. However, ethical decisions can be complex, requiring the guidance of professional values and critical appraisal of the situation. METHODS: This study was conducted using a correlational design. Convenience sampling was used, resulting in a sample of 56 nurse leaders in various positions. RESULT: Ethical decision making and professional values were found to be strongly correlated. CONCLUSION: Ethical decision making and professional values are highly correlated in this sample. Understanding the importance of the effects of certain factors on ethical decision making can assist in forming an environment supportive of ethical practices for nurses.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Leadership , Nurse Administrators , Humans , Nurse Administrators/ethics , Decision Making/ethics , Female , Male , Adult , Ethics, Nursing , Middle Aged , Social Values , Attitude of Health Personnel
13.
J Nurses Prof Dev ; 40(3): 167-171, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38687712

ABSTRACT

Exposing new nurses to theoretical teaching strategies that help them to navigate the ethical challenges in clinical practice is essential for retention and long-term job satisfaction. This article explores the rationale for teaching ethics content in nurse residency programs and ways to navigate ethical decision-making in the clinical setting. Examples of evidence-informed teaching strategies that enhance knowledge retention and reduce the gap between ethical theory and practice are included.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Ethics, Nursing/education , Teaching , Internship, Nonmedical
14.
West J Nurs Res ; 46(6): 404-415, 2024 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38676378

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Critically ill patients often experience distressful and impactful symptoms and conditions that include pain, agitation/sedation, delirium, immobility, and sleep disturbances (PADIS). The presence of PADIS can affect recovery and long-term patient outcomes. An integral part of critical care nursing is PADIS prevention, assessment, and management. Ethical sensitivity of everyday nursing practice related to PADIS is an imperative part of implementing evidence-based care for patients. OBJECTIVE: The first 2 aims of this study were to determine the measured level of ethical awareness as an attribute of ethical sensitivity among the critical care nurse participants and to explore the ethical sensitivity of critical care nurses related to the implementation of PADIS care. The third aim was to examine how the measured level of ethical awareness and ethical sensitivity exploration results converge, diverge, and/or relate to each other to produce a more complete understanding of PADIS ethical sensitivity by critical care nurses. METHODS: This was a convergent parallel mixed methods study (QUAL + quant). Ethical sensitivity was explored by conducting an ethnography of critical care nurses. The participants were 19 critical care nurses who were observed during patient care, interviewed individually, participated in a focus group (QUAL), and were administered the Ethical Awareness Scale (quant). FINDINGS: Despite high levels of individual ethical awareness among nurses, themes of ambiguous beneficence, heedless autonomy, and moral distress were found to be related to PADIS care. CONCLUSIONS: More effort is needed to establish moral community, ethical leadership, and individual ethical guidance for nurses to establish patient-centered decision-making and PADIS care.


Subject(s)
Critical Care Nursing , Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Critical Care Nursing/ethics , Critical Care Nursing/methods , Female , Male , Adult , Middle Aged , Sleep Wake Disorders , Critical Care/ethics , Critical Care/psychology , Critical Care/methods
15.
J Nurs Scholarsh ; 56(3): 355-356, 2024 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38644524

Subject(s)
Ethics, Nursing , Humans
16.
J Christ Nurs ; 41(2): E32-E37, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38436351

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: The influence of Western Christian missionary nurses has been recorded in the history and development of nursing in China. The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of Christianity on Chinese nursing ethics. This documentary research used content analysis to investigate Christian value trends over 13 years (1920-1932) as reflected in a major bilingual Chinese nursing journal.


Subject(s)
Christianity , Ethics, Nursing , Humans , China , Missionaries
17.
Appl Nurs Res ; 75: 151768, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38490799

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Nurses face various ethical conflicts when taking care of patients, and such conflicts require moral courage. This systematic review was conducted with the aim of investigating moral courage and its related factors among nurses. METHODS: To find related studies, the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. The PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, Scopus, Embase and Science Direct databases were searched using keywords such as Courage, Moral Courage, and Nurses, and no lower time limit was imposed when conducting the searches. The identified studies were published between January 2000 and March 2023. Quality of articles was assessed using the STROBE checklist. RESULTS: The pooled sample size for the 19 included studies was 7863. All studies were observational and cross-sectional. The results showed that three categories of factors most related to moral courage are individual, moral, and factors related to the organization. Underlying factors of each category are also provided within this paper. CONCLUSION: Moral courage is an integral part of nursing, which as a profession, is becoming even more challenging with the advancement of science and technology. Therefore, there is a need for nurses and especially nursing managers to be considerate of factors affecting moral courage of nurses, with a view to strengthening the positive factors and reducing the negative impacts.


Subject(s)
Courage , Ethics, Nursing , Nurses , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Morals
19.
Res Theory Nurs Pract ; 38(1): 124-136, 2024 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38350688

ABSTRACT

Pediatric nursing is known to be challenging in relation to balancing care and relationships with children and families. There is a growing body of knowledge about the perspectives of the various aspects of care; nurses' thoughts and perspectives, parents' needs and desire for collaboration, and the continued care and support required are related. This article is a secondary analysis of data collected using the theoretical framework and methodology of Margaret Newman's Health as Expanding Consciousness to understand how pediatric nurses develop knowledge. Interviews were conducted with eight pediatric nurses working in inpatient settings with children and families experiencing chronic, complex healthcare needs. The nurses, whose experience spanned between 3 and 30 years, related to stories of how their view of practice evolved over time and with experiences and the challenges to professional boundaries and ethical practice. Reflection on these experiences brought nurses to acknowledge sometimes crossing professional boundaries and struggling with ethical issues. Ultimately, reflections brought appreciation of lessons learned and evolution of the understanding of their role in the care of these children and families.


Subject(s)
Ethics, Nursing , Nurses, Pediatric , Nurses , Child , Humans , Qualitative Research , Parents
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