Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, St Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
JDL Consulting, Ossining, NY, USA.
BMC Med Ethics. 2022 Jul 22;23(1):76. doi: 10.1186/s12910-022-00812-w.
Pediatricians in developing countries face different ethical dilemmas than do doctors working in settings with more resources. There are very few studies from developing countries analyzing pediatricians' knowledge and attitudes regarding the ethical dilemmas that arise in such settings. To address this gap, we explored the clinical ethical knowledge, attitude and experience of physicians who are working in the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health (DPCH) of St Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College (SPHMMC), Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
All pediatric resident doctors and pediatric consultants who were working in the DPCH of SPHMMC in December, 2020.
A structured pretested self-administered questionnaire was distributed to all 79 of the residents and consultants in the department during the period December 15-27, 2020. The questionnaire assessed the knowledge (23 questions), attitude (9 questions) and experiences (9 questions) of the study participants regarding a variety of bioethical issues. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 20.0 for windows. The mean, median, standard deviation, and interquartile range of respondents' scores were determined and compared using Fisher's exact test.
A total of 59/79 (75%) physicians completed the questionnaire. The mean age of the participants was 30.7 ± 4.1 years. Thirty six (61.0%) were female. At the time of data collection, more than half (57.6%) served < 5 years as a physician. The mean ethics knowledge score of the respondents was 12.3 ± 2.34 out of 23 knowledge questions. The lowest and highest knowledge scores were 8 and 19 respectively. Scores were highest on questions about confidentiality (94.9% correct) and lowest on questions about genetic testing and diagnosis (13.6% correct). Only 13 (22.4%) physicians agreed with the practice of children should never be treated without consent of the parent.
Tertiary care pediatricians at one hospital in Ethiopia lack knowledge about current standards in bioethics. There is a need for more ethics education in this setting.
发展中国家的儿科医生所面临的伦理困境与资源更为丰富的环境中的医生不同。很少有来自发展中国家的研究分析儿科医生在这种环境中所面临的伦理困境的知识和态度。为了弥补这一空白,我们探讨了在埃塞俄比亚亚的斯亚贝巴圣保罗医院千年医学学院(SPHMMC)儿科和儿童保健系(DPCH)工作的医生的临床伦理知识、态度和经验。
2020 年 12 月在 SPHMMC 的 DPCH 工作的所有儿科住院医生和儿科顾问医生。
在 2020 年 12 月 15 日至 27 日期间,向该部门的 79 名住院医生和顾问医生分发了一份经过预先测试的结构化自我管理问卷。该问卷评估了研究参与者对各种生物伦理问题的知识(23 个问题)、态度(9 个问题)和经验(9 个问题)。使用 SPSS 版本 20.0 for windows 进行数据分析。确定并比较了受访者得分的平均值、中位数、标准差和四分位距,并使用 Fisher 精确检验进行比较。
共有 59/79(75%)名医生完成了问卷。参与者的平均年龄为 30.7±4.1 岁。36 名(61.0%)为女性。在数据收集时,超过一半(57.6%)的医生作为医生的服务年限<5 年。受访者的平均伦理知识得分为 23 个知识问题中的 12.3±2.34 分。最低和最高的知识得分分别为 8 分和 19 分。在关于保密的问题上得分最高(94.9%正确),而在关于基因检测和诊断的问题上得分最低(13.6%正确)。只有 13 名(22.4%)医生同意儿童在未经父母同意的情况下不应接受治疗的做法。
埃塞俄比亚一家三级保健儿科医生缺乏有关当前生物伦理学标准的知识。在这种环境下,需要进行更多的伦理教育。