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1.
Nurs Outlook ; 68(1): 62-72, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31375346

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Since 2015, Michigan has required parents who request nonmedical exemptions (NMEs) from school or daycare immunization mandates to receive education from local public health staff (usually nurses). This is unlike most other US states that have implemented mandatory immunization counseling, which require physicians to document immunization education, or which provide online instruction. PURPOSE: To attend to the activity and dispositions of the public health staff who provide "waiver education". METHOD: This study reports results of focus group interviews with 39 of Michigan's vaccine waiver educators (37 nurses), conducted during 2016 and 2017, and analyzed in 2018. FINDINGS: Four themes emerged from analysis of the transcripts of these interviews: Participants had (1) complex and nuanced observations and evaluations of parents' judgments and feelings about vaccines and vaccine education; (2) sympathetic attitudes about alternative vaccine schedules; (3) critical and supportive evaluations of institutional policies and the background political context of immunization education; and (4) consistent commitments to respect parents, affirm their values, and protect their rights. DISCUSSION: These results show that public health nurses are sensitive to the burdens mandatory immunization education places on families, the motivations for parents' requests for nonmedical exemptions, and the values implicated by personal immunization decisions and government immunization policies. In light of the unique training, experiences, and public reputation of nurses, there is good reason for additional investigation into the roles that nurses can play in immunization education and in vaccine mandate policies, more generally.


Subject(s)
Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Parents/education , Vaccination Refusal , Vaccination , Female , Focus Groups , Human Rights , Humans , Immunization/standards , Interviews as Topic , Male , Michigan
2.
Qual Health Res ; 29(1): 32-41, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30799764

ABSTRACT

Health sociologists interested in how macro state influences affect micro health care practices have much to gain from meta-ethnography research. In this article, we bring together insights from two separate empirical studies on state health care services involving HIV/AIDS as a way to speak to larger issues about the organization and production of medical expertise and governance in health care systems. We use Noblit and Hare's meta-ethnography approach to bring these studies into conversation and identify six shared "organizers" of health care encounters. The organizers illustrate how state health interests operate across institutional contexts and impact the work of providers in seemingly unrelated health care settings. On the basis of this synthesis, we conclude that state interests both structure and create conflict in health care settings. We believe this perspective offers the potential to advance the goals of health sociology and the field of qualitative health research in general.


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , HIV Infections/psychology , HIV Infections/therapy , Nurses, Public Health/organization & administration , State Medicine/organization & administration , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , Anthropology, Cultural , Canada , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Disclosure , Emigrants and Immigrants , Humans , Nurse's Role , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Qualitative Research , Sociology, Medical , State Medicine/ethics , State Medicine/standards
3.
Nurs Ethics ; 26(1): 134-147, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28393606

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:: The development of professional values in nursing is directly related to quality and ethical clinical practise and may also increase practitioner and patients' satisfaction. Some factors, such as work setting or work experience, can influence the importance granted to the professional values of nursing. OBJECTIVES:: To compare in primary care nurses and hospital care nurses the importance granted to professional values and to contrast this perception as a function of professional experience. RESEARCH DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS AND RESEARCH CONTEXT:: Descriptive cross-sectional study. Participants were 380 nursing professionals from the public health system (primary care and hospital care). Three dimensions were analysed: ethics, professional expertise and professional mastery. Data were collected from January to June 2015. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS:: We obtained permission from the Ethics Committee and participants' informed consent. FINDINGS:: Hospital care professionals attached more importance to all the values analysed, regardless of their work experience. Ethical values, such as confidentiality and respect for the person, were considered to be very important in both systems. Values related to professional expertise obtained lower scores, especially in primary care. In general, professionals with more than 20 years' experience granted less importance to the values. CONCLUSION:: The professional setting influenced the importance assigned to professional nursing values, and clear differences were observed between primary and hospital care. The domain of ethics was considered the most important. It is necessary to reflect on the significance attributed to professional values, especially in more expert nursing staff.


Subject(s)
Nurses/psychology , Social Values , Workplace/standards , Adult , Attitude of Health Personnel , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Job Satisfaction , Male , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Nurses, Public Health/psychology , Spain , Surveys and Questionnaires , Workplace/psychology
4.
Nurs Ethics ; 26(6): 1822-1833, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29895221

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Visual technologies are central to youth culture and are often the preferred communication means of adolescents. Although these tools can be beneficial in fostering relations, adolescents' use of visual technologies and social media also raises ethical concerns. AIMS: We explored how school public health nurses identify and resolve the ethical challenges involved in the use of visual technologies in health dialogues with adolescents. RESEARCH DESIGN: This is a qualitative study utilizing data from focus group discussions. PARTICIPANTS AND RESEARCH CONTEXT: We conducted focus group discussions using two semi-structured discussion guides with seven groups of public health nurses (n = 40) working in Norwegian school health services. The data were collected during January and October 2016. Discussions were audio recorded, transcribed, and coded into themes and subthemes using systematic text condensation. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS: The leader of the public health nursing service who agreed to provide access for the study and the Norwegian Center for Research Data that reviewed and approved the study. All participants gave informed consent. FINDINGS: In adolescents' use of visual materials with public health nurses, ethical concerns were raised regarding suicide ideations, socially unacceptable content, violation of privacy, and presentations of possible child neglect. The nurses utilized their professional knowledge and experience when identifying and navigating these ethical dilemmas; they resolved ethical uncertainties through peer discussion and collaboration with fellow nurses and other professionals. DISCUSSION: We discussed the findings in light of Annemarie Mol's interpretation of the ethics of care. Mol expands the notion of ethical care to include the action of technologies. CONCLUSION: Although the increasing use of visual technologies offered benefits, school nurses faced ethical challenges in health dialogues with adolescents. To address and navigate these ethical issues, they relied on their experience and caring practices based on their professional ethics. Uncertainties were resolved through peer dialogue and guidance.


Subject(s)
Adolescent Behavior/psychology , Ethics, Nursing , User-Computer Interface , Adolescent , Focus Groups/methods , Humans , Norway , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Qualitative Research
5.
Rev. Rol enferm ; 38(4): 14-21, abr. 2015. ilus, tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-137127

ABSTRACT

Introducción. La existencia de estereotipos y prejuicios hacia la enfermedad mental propicia la desadaptación social, una baja autoestima, la depresión y un aumento de la carga familiar del paciente. El personal sanitario como agente estabilizador de la patología ha de poseer una actitud adecuada para la aplicación de cuidados psicoterapéuticos de calidad. Metodología. Se trata de un estudio observacional, descriptivo y transversal. La muestra está compuesta de 52 residentes de medicina del EOXI Vigo. Se recogen sus datos sociodemográficos, si consideran que tienen formación en salud mental, un cuestionario de contacto con el trastorno mental [1] y por último un cuestionario de atribución de actitudes hacia la enfermedad mental [2]. Resultados. Más de la mitad de la muestra está compuesta por mujeres de una edad media de 26 años, sin experiencia profesional ni formación en salud mental y con un bajo nivel de contacto con la patología. Las actitudes que obtuvieron mayor puntuación son la de ayuda, piedad y coacción a seguir un tratamiento. Se identifican los siguientes diagnósticos enfermeros en la población a estudio: (00126) Falta de conocimientos; (00055) Desempeño ineficaz del rol, y (00174) Riesgo de compromiso de la dignidad humana. Conclusiones. Existen prejuicios de peligrosidad que se consolidan en actitudes de segregación social con el enfermo. Se identifican necesidades formativas, de entrenamiento en habilidades y de contacto con las personas que presentan estas patologías. Es necesario implantar medidas para la erradicación o al menos la disminución de estas actitudes durante la formación universitaria. Enfermería tiene metodología eficaz para intervenir sobre las actitudes estigmatizantes (AU)


Introduction. There are stereotypes and prejudices concerning the mental illness that lead to social exclusion, low self-esteem of sufferers, depression and cause a increase of the familiar burden. Health staff is a stabilizing agent who has to have a proper attitude to apply quality cares. Methods. This is a cross-sectional, observational and descriptive study. The sample is made up of 52 medicine residents in the Vigo EOXI. Their sociodemographic data, if they ahave mental health training, a contact with mental illness questionnaire [1] and a attribution of attitudes toward mental illness questionnarie [2] were collected. Results. More than half of the sample consists of women with an average age of 26, with no mental health training and previous professional experience, and have a low level of contact with mental pathologies. Coercion, help, pity were the attitudes with the highest rated. The followind nurse diagnosis are identified in the screened population: (00126) Insufficient knowledge; (00055) Ineffective performance of the role, and (00174) Risk of human dignity. Conclusions. There are prejudices of dangerousness that are transforming in social segregation attitudes toward mental illness. Needs of training, social skills and contact the pathology are identified. Install measures as part of university courses it’s necessary to eliminate or reduce discrimination. Nursing has an effective methodology for treating stigmatizing attitudes (AU)


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Mental Health Assistance , Community Mental Health Centers/ethics , Community Mental Health Centers , Societies/ethics , Nurses, Public Health/education , Nurses, Public Health/organization & administration , Community Mental Health Centers/classification , Community Mental Health Centers/standards , Societies/policies , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Nurses, Public Health/psychology , Observational Study , Cross-Sectional Studies/methods
6.
Int J Equity Health ; 14: 15, 2015 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25643761

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Many countries have demonstrated interest in expanding their medical tourism sectors because of its potential economic and health system benefits. However, medical tourism poses challenges to the equitable distribution of health resources between international and local patients and private and public medical facilities. Currently, very little is known about how medical tourism is perceived among front line workers and users of health systems in medical tourism 'destinations'. Barbados is one such country currently seeking to expand its medical tourism sector. Barbadian nurses and health care users were consulted about the challenges and benefits posed by ongoing medical tourism development there. METHODS: Focus groups were held with two stakeholder groups in May, 2013. Nine (n = 9) citizens who use the public health system participated in the first focus group and seven (n = 7) nurses participated in the second. Each focus group ran for 1.5 hours and was digitally recorded. Following transcription, thematic analysis of the digitally coded focus group data was conducted to identify cross-cutting themes and issues. RESULTS: Three core concerns regarding medical tourism's health equity impacts were raised; its potential to 1) incentivize migration of health workers from public to private facilities, 2) burden Barbados' lone tertiary health care centre, and 3) produce different tiers of quality of care within the same health system. These concerns were informed and tempered by the existing a) health system structure that incorporates both universal public healthcare and a significant private medical sector, b) international mobility among patients and health workers, and c) Barbados' large recreational tourism sector, which served as the main reference in discussions about medical tourism's impacts. Incorporating these concerns and contextual influences, participants' shared their expectations of how medical tourism should locally develop and operate. CONCLUSIONS: By engaging with local health workers and users, we begin to unpack how potential health equity impacts of medical tourism in an emerging destination are understood by local stakeholders who are not directing sector development. This further outlines how these groups employ knowledge from their home context to ground and reconcile their hopes and concerns for the impacts posed by medical tourism.


Subject(s)
Health Resources/ethics , Healthcare Disparities/ethics , Medical Tourism , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Patient Acceptance of Health Care , Private Sector/ethics , Barbados , Focus Groups , Health Resources/supply & distribution , Humans , Private Sector/statistics & numerical data
7.
Nurs Health Sci ; 16(1): 67-77, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24635901

ABSTRACT

Little is known about nurses' direct experiences of ethical preparedness for dealing with catastrophic public health emergencies and healthcare disasters or the ethical quandaries that may arise during such events. A systematic literature review was undertaken to explore and synthesize qualitative research literature reporting nurses' direct experiences of being prepared for and managing the ethical challenges posed by catastrophic public health emergencies and healthcare disasters. Twenty-six research studies were retrieved for detailed examination and assessed by two independent reviewers for methodological validity prior to inclusion in the review. Of these, 12 studies published between 1973 and 2011 were deemed to meet the inclusion criteria and were critically appraised. The review confirmed there is a significant gap in the literature on nurses' experiences of ethical preparedness for managing public health emergencies and healthcare disasters, and the ethical quandaries they encounter during such events. This finding highlights the need for ethical considerations in emergency planning, preparedness, and response by nurses to be given more focused attention in the interests of better informing the ethical basis of emergency disaster management.


Subject(s)
Disaster Planning , Disasters , Nurses, Public Health/ethics , Nurses, Public Health/psychology , Public Health/ethics , Attitude of Health Personnel , Clinical Competence , Crisis Intervention , Decision Making , Disease Outbreaks , Ethics, Nursing , Evidence-Based Nursing , Humans , Mass Casualty Incidents , Organizational Policy , Patient-Centered Care/ethics , Public Health/education , Qualitative Research , Risk Factors
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