Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Iran.
Nurs Ethics. 2019 Nov-Dec;26(7-8):2427-2437. doi: 10.1177/0969733018791350. Epub 2018 Aug 22.
Critical care nurses work in a complex and stressful environment with diverse norms, values, interactions, and relationships. Therefore, they inevitably experience some levels of ethical conflict.
The aim of this study is to analyze the relationship of ethical conflict with personal and organizational characteristics among critical care nurses.
This descriptive-correlational study was conducted in 2017 on a random sample of 216 critical care nurses. Participants were recruited through stratified random sampling. Data collection tools were a demographic and professional characteristics questionnaire, the Ethical Conflict in Nursing Questionnaire-Critical Care Version, and the Organizational and Managerial Factors Questionnaire. The data were analyzed using the SPSS software (v. 22.0).
All participants were informed about the study's aim and were assured that participation in and withdrawal from the study would be voluntary.
The mean score of exposure to ethical conflict was 201.91 ± 80.38. The highest-scored conflict-inducing clinical situation was "working with professionally incompetent nurses or nurse assistants." Married nurses, nurses with official employment, nurses with master's degree, and nurses with the history of attending ethics education programs had significantly higher exposure to ethical conflict than the other nurses (p < 0.05). The significant predictors of exposure to ethical conflict were marital status, educational status, reward system, organizational culture, manager's conduct, and organizational structure and regulations (p < 0.05). These predictors accounted for 37.2% of the total variance of exposure to ethical conflict.
Critical care nurses experience moderate levels of exposure to ethical conflict. A wide range of personal and organizational factors can contribute to such exposure, the most significant of which is the professional incompetence of nursing colleagues, nurse assistants, and physicians. Therefore, many improvements at personal and organizational levels are needed to reduce critical care nurses' exposure to ethical conflict.
重症监护病房的护士在一个复杂且充满压力的环境中工作,其中存在着多样化的规范、价值观、互动和关系。因此,他们不可避免地会遇到一定程度的伦理冲突。
本研究旨在分析重症监护病房护士的伦理冲突与个人和组织特征之间的关系。
这是一项 2017 年进行的描述性相关性研究,对象为随机抽取的 216 名重症监护病房护士。通过分层随机抽样招募参与者。数据收集工具包括人口统计学和专业特征问卷、护理伦理冲突问卷-重症监护版本和组织与管理因素问卷。使用 SPSS 软件(v. 22.0)对数据进行分析。
所有参与者都被告知了研究的目的,并保证参与和退出研究是自愿的。
暴露于伦理冲突的平均得分为 201.91 ± 80.38。引起冲突的最高临床情况是“与专业能力不足的护士或护士助理合作”。已婚护士、有正式雇佣关系的护士、有硕士学位的护士和参加过伦理教育项目的护士比其他护士更容易暴露于伦理冲突(p < 0.05)。暴露于伦理冲突的显著预测因素包括婚姻状况、教育程度、奖励制度、组织文化、经理的行为以及组织结构和规章制度(p < 0.05)。这些预测因素占暴露于伦理冲突总方差的 37.2%。
重症监护病房的护士经历了中等程度的伦理冲突暴露。个人和组织的多个因素可能导致这种暴露,其中最重要的是护理同事、护士助理和医生的专业能力不足。因此,需要在个人和组织层面进行许多改进,以减少重症监护病房护士的伦理冲突暴露。