Lucchetti Giancarlo, de Oliveira Leandro Romani, Leite José Roberto, Lucchetti Alessandra Lamas Granero
Department of Medicine, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Juiz de Fora, Brazil.
BMC Med Ethics. 2014 Dec 15;15:85. doi: 10.1186/1472-6939-15-85.
Medical students(MS) will face ethical issues throughout their lives as doctors. The present study aims to investigate medical students' opinions on controversial ethical issues and factors associated with these opinions.
SBRAME (Spirituality and Brazilian Medical Education) is a multicenter study involving 12 Brazilian medical schools with 5950 MS. Participants completed a questionnaire that collected information on socio-demographic data, medical schools characteristics, religious beliefs and opinions on controversial ethical issues. Of all MS, 3630 participated in the survey (61.0%).
The sample was 53.8% women and the mean age was 22.5 years. In general, most MS have no objections to prescription of birth control (90.8%), adult stem cell use (87.5%), embryonic stem cell use (82.0%) and abortion for genetic reasons (51.2%). Approximately half of students have no objections to human cloning (47.3%), 45.7% to withdrawal of artificial life support, 41.4% to euthanasia and 23.3% to abortion for failed contraception. Socio-demographic data such as age, gender and income had little influence on MS opinions. On the other hand, medical schools characteristics (number of medical students in the university, year of medical school foundation, location of the university and type of university) and religious aspects (religious affiliation, religious attendance, non-organizational religiousness and intrinsic religiousness) were highly correlated with their opinions. In general, MS with more supportive opinions on controversial ethical issues were less religious and from non-traditional (newer), urban, public and bigger universities.
The current study reveals MS have different opinions regarding controversial ethical issues. Noteworthy, these opinions seem to be shaped more by university characteristics and religious beliefs than socio-demographic data.
医学生作为医生在其一生中都将面临伦理问题。本研究旨在调查医学生对有争议的伦理问题的看法以及与这些看法相关的因素。
SBRAME(灵性与巴西医学教育)是一项多中心研究,涉及巴西12所医学院校的5950名医学生。参与者完成了一份问卷,该问卷收集了社会人口统计学数据、医学院校特征、宗教信仰以及对有争议的伦理问题的看法等信息。在所有医学生中,3630人参与了调查(61.0%)。
样本中女性占53.8%,平均年龄为22.5岁。总体而言,大多数医学生对避孕药具处方(90.8%)、成体干细胞使用(87.5%)、胚胎干细胞使用(82.0%)以及因遗传原因堕胎(51.2%)没有异议。大约一半的学生对人类克隆(47.3%)、撤除人工生命支持(45.7%)、安乐死(41.4%)以及因避孕失败而堕胎(23.3%)没有异议。年龄、性别和收入等社会人口统计学数据对医学生的看法影响很小。另一方面,医学院校特征(大学医学生人数、医学院校建校年份、大学所在地以及大学类型)和宗教方面(宗教归属、宗教活动参与度、非组织性宗教信仰和内在宗教信仰)与他们的看法高度相关。总体而言,对有争议的伦理问题持更支持态度的医学生宗教信仰较少,来自非传统(较新)、城市、公立且规模较大的大学。
当前研究表明,医学生对有争议的伦理问题有不同看法。值得注意的是,这些看法似乎更多地由大学特征和宗教信仰而非社会人口统计学数据所塑造。