University of Botswana, Botswana.
Human Resource Development Council, Botswana.
Nurs Ethics. 2019 Aug;26(5):1540-1553. doi: 10.1177/0969733017753743. Epub 2018 Mar 7.
Managing HIV treatment is a complex multi-dimensional task because of a combination of factors such as stigma and discrimination of some populations who frequently get infected with HIV. In addition, patient-provider encounters have become increasingly multicultural, making effective communication and provision of ethically sound care a challenge.
This article explores ethical issues that health service providers in the United States and Botswana encountered in their interaction with patients in HIV care.
A descriptive qualitative design was used to collect data from health service providers and patients using focused group discussions. This article is based on responses from health service providers only.
This article is based on 11 focused group discussions with a total sample of 71 service providers in seven US sites and one Botswana site.
Ethical review boards at all the study sites reviewed the study protocol and approved it. Ethical review boards of the study's coordinating centers, Rutgers University and the University of California at San Francisco, also approved it. The study participants provided a written informed consent to participate.
HIV service providers encountered ethical challenges in all the four Beauchamp and Childress' biomedical ethics of respect for patients' autonomy, beneficence, justice, and nonmaleficence.
The finding that HIV service providers encounter ethical challenges in their interaction with patients is supported by prior studies. The ethical challenges are particularly prominent in multicultural care and resource-constrained care environments.
Provision of HIV care is fraught with ethical challenges that tend to pose different issues depending on a given care environment. It is important that strong partnerships are developed among key stakeholders in HIV care. In addition, health service providers need to be provided with resources so they can provide quality and ethically sound care.
由于一些人群经常感染 HIV,他们受到了一些因素的影响,如污名化和歧视,因此管理 HIV 治疗是一项复杂的多维任务。此外,患者与提供者的接触变得越来越多样化,这使得有效沟通和提供符合道德规范的护理成为一项挑战。
本文探讨了美国和博茨瓦纳的卫生服务提供者在与 HIV 护理患者互动中遇到的伦理问题。
使用描述性定性设计从卫生服务提供者和患者那里收集数据,使用焦点小组讨论。本文基于仅来自卫生服务提供者的回应。
本文基于对美国七个地点和博茨瓦纳一个地点的 71 名服务提供者进行的 11 次焦点小组讨论。
所有研究地点的伦理审查委员会都审查了研究方案并批准了该方案。该研究的协调中心——罗格斯大学和加利福尼亚大学旧金山分校的伦理审查委员会也批准了该方案。研究参与者提供了书面知情同意书以参与。
HIV 服务提供者在尊重患者自主权、善行、正义和不伤害四项 Beauchamp 和 Childress 生物医学伦理原则方面都遇到了伦理挑战。
HIV 服务提供者在与患者互动中遇到伦理挑战的发现得到了先前研究的支持。这些伦理挑战在多元文化护理和资源有限的护理环境中尤为突出。
HIV 护理的提供充满了伦理挑战,这些挑战往往根据特定的护理环境而产生不同的问题。在 HIV 护理中建立重要利益相关者之间的强有力伙伴关系非常重要。此外,还需要为卫生服务提供者提供资源,以便他们能够提供优质和符合道德规范的护理。