Department of Physiology, St Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Centre for Medical Ethics, Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Pb. 1130 Blindern, N-0318, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Med Ethics. 2020 Feb 11;21(1):16. doi: 10.1186/s12910-020-0458-7.
The Ethiopian law on abortion was liberalized in 2005. However, as a strongly religious country, the new law has remained controversial from the outset. Many abortion providers have religious allegiances, which begs the question how to negotiate the conflicting demands of their jobs and their commitment to their patients on the one hand, and their religious convictions and moral values on the other.
A qualitative study based on in-depth interviews with 30 healthcare professionals involved in abortion services in either private/non-governmental clinics or in public hospitals in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Transcripts were analyzed using systematic text condensation, a qualitative analysis framework.
For the participants, religious norms and the view that the early fetus has a moral right to life count against providing abortion; while the interests and needs of the pregnant woman supports providing abortion services. The professionals weighed these value considerations differently and reached different conclusions. One group appears to have experienced genuine conflicts of conscience, while another group attempted to reconcile religious norms and values with their work, especially through framing provision of abortion as helping and preventing harm and suffering. The professionals handle this moral balancing act on their own. In general, participants working in the private sector reported less moral dilemma with abortion than did their colleagues from public hospitals.
This study highlights the difficulties in reconciling tensions between religious convictions and moral norms and values, and professional duties. Such insights might inform guidelines and healthcare ethics education.
埃塞俄比亚的堕胎法于 2005 年放宽。然而,作为一个宗教信仰非常强烈的国家,新法律从一开始就存在争议。许多堕胎提供者都有宗教信仰,这就引出了一个问题,即他们如何在一方面协调工作和对患者的承诺与他们的宗教信仰和道德价值观之间的冲突需求,另一方面又如何协调工作和对患者的承诺。
这是一项基于对 30 名参与埃塞俄比亚亚的斯亚贝巴私人/非政府诊所或公立医院堕胎服务的医疗保健专业人员的深入访谈的定性研究。使用系统文本浓缩,一种定性分析框架,对转录本进行分析。
对于参与者来说,宗教规范和认为早期胎儿有道德生存权利的观点反对提供堕胎;而孕妇的利益和需求支持提供堕胎服务。专业人员对这些价值考虑因素的重视程度不同,得出了不同的结论。有一组人似乎经历了真正的良心冲突,而另一组人则试图调和宗教规范和价值观与他们的工作,特别是通过将提供堕胎定义为帮助和预防伤害和痛苦。专业人员自行处理这种道德平衡行为。总的来说,与公立医院的同事相比,在私营部门工作的参与者报告说,他们在堕胎方面的道德困境较少。
本研究强调了在宗教信仰和道德规范与价值观以及专业职责之间调和紧张关系的困难。这些见解可能为准则和医疗保健伦理教育提供信息。