keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37131157/health-professions-students-approaches-towards-practice-driven-ethical-dilemmas-a-case-based-qualitative-study
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Phyu Hnin Hlaing, Ahmed Hasswan, Vida Salmanpour, Sarra Shorbagi, Tahra AlMahmoud, Feras Jassim Jirjees, Sausan Al Kawas, Salman Yusuf Guraya, Nabil Sulaiman
BACKGROUND: In healthcare practice, ethical challenges are inevitable and their optimal handling may potentialy improve patient care. Ethical development in medical education is critical for the transition from a medical and health sciences student to an ethical healthcare practitioner. Understanding the health professions students' approaches towards practice-driven ethical dilemmas could harness i the effective ethical development in their medical education. This study attempts to identify the health professions students' approaches towards practice-driven ethical dilemmas...
May 2, 2023: BMC Medical Education
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37107931/psychometric-properties-of-the-moral-disengagement-through-technologies-questionnaire-mdtech-q-in-a-sample-of-chilean-university-students
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karina Polanco-Levicán, Sonia Salvo-Garrido
In the virtual environment, hostile and aggressive comments that could negatively affect university students who often use different digital platforms are frequently observed, more than other age groups who have little or no supervision. In this sense, moral disengagement (MD) has been linked to different negative behaviors that manifest in physical interactions and which currently take place on the Internet, creating the need for instruments that specifically address MD online. The aim of this study is to adapt and validate the Moral Disengagement through Technologies Questionnaire (MDTech-Q) with Chilean university students...
April 12, 2023: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37104669/-suddenly-feeling-dark-a-qualitative-study-on-the-experiences-of-nurses-facing-coworker-death-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Petrus Kanisius Siga Tage, Herliana Monika Azi Djogo, Yulia M K Letor, Maria Yoanita Bina
BACKGROUND: The coworkers of nurses who died because of COVID-19 infection generally experience a highly emotional grieving process. Nurses grieving the loss of a coworker during the COVID-19 pandemic experience higher psychological stress because of their high workload and the grueling shifts required to manage health emergencies during the pandemic and cope with long-standing staffing shortages. The limited number of studies discussing this issue has resulted in insufficient evidence necessary to develop effective counseling strategies and psychological support for nurses in Indonesia dealing with the massive waves of COVID-19 cases...
May 1, 2023: Journal of Nursing Research: JNR
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37073505/surprising-pandemic-experiences-a-confrontation-between-principle-based-and-virtue-ethics-and-a-plea-for-virtue-ethics-training-for-medical-students-and-residents-a-rudimentary-outline-of-a-four-step-model
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shlomit Zuckerman, Gerrit K Kimsma, Ignaas Devisch
BACKGROUND: In past years, physicians have, with a certain continuity, reported increasing numbers of burnout, depression and compassion fatigue in their daily practice. These problems were attributed, not only but also, to a loss of public trust and an increase in violent behaviour of patients and family members towards medical professionals in all walks of life. Recently, however, during the breakout of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in 2020, there were public expressions of appreciation and respect for health care workers that almost universally have been assessed as indications of a re-establishment of public trust in physicians and appreciation for the medical professions' commitments...
April 18, 2023: Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37009126/mapping-the-ethical-aspects-in-end-of-life-care-for-persons-with-a-severe-and-persistent-mental-illness-a-scoping-review-of-the-literature
#25
REVIEW
Loïc Moureau, Monica Verhofstadt, Axel Liégeois
Persons with severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI) make up a vulnerable group within mental healthcare and society. Not only do they suffer from long-term, serious psychiatric disorders; they often also experience considerable problems in their psychosocial functioning. Research has disclosed that the care needs of this target group are complex, and that the life expectancy of these persons is significantly lower than in the general population. Given (1) the lower life expectancy of persons with SPMI, (2) the higher suicide risk related to mental disorders, and (3) the legalization and practice of medical assistance in dying in an increasing number of countries, it is of utmost importance to map the ethical aspects and challenges of end-of-life care needs in persons with SPMI...
2023: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36940445/perspectives-on-recovery-oriented-care-in-mental-health-practices-health-professionals-experiences
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kim Jørgensen, Mathias Søren Hansen, Trine Groth, Morten Hansen, Bengt Karlsson
In several Western countries, mental health professionals work in accordance with the principles of recovery-oriented practices, but there is little research into what opportunities there are for fostering recovery-oriented practices in mental health settings. To investigate how central elements of recovery-oriented practices are reflected in health professionals experiences of care and treatment in mental health. Four focus group interviews with nurses and other health professionals are conducted and analysed using manifest content analysis to carry out a low-level analysis of the participants' experiences in mental healthcare...
March 20, 2023: Issues in Mental Health Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36868593/dose-and-administration-time-of-indocyanine-green-in-near-infrared-fluorescence-cholangiography-during-laparoscopic-cholecystectomy-dotig-study-protocol-for-a-randomised-clinical-trial
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jaime López-Sánchez, Sonsoles Garrosa-Muñoz, Fernando Pardo Aranda, Clara Gené Škrabec, Ricardo López Pérez, Patricia Rodríguez-Fortúnez, José Manuel Sánchez Santos, Luis Muñoz-Bellvís
BACKGROUND: One of the most severe complications in laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) is intraoperative bile duct injury (BDI). Despite its low incidence, the medical implications for the patient can be serious. Besides, BDI can also generate significant legal issues in healthcare. Different techniques have been described to reduce the incidence of this complication, and near-infrared fluorescence cholangiography with indocyanine green (NIRFC-ICG) is one of the latest additions. In spite of the great interest aroused by this procedure, there are currently great disparities in the usage or administration protocols of ICG...
March 3, 2023: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36600366/enhancing-authenticity-diagnosticity-and-e-quivalence-ad-equiv-in-multicentre-osce-exams-in-health-professionals-education-protocol-for-a-complex-intervention-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Yeates, Adriano Maluf, Ruth Kinston, Natalie Cope, Gareth McCray, Kathy Cullen, Vikki O'Neill, Aidan Cole, Rhian Goodfellow, Rebecca Vallender, Ching-Wa Chung, Robert K McKinley, Richard Fuller, Geoff Wong
INTRODUCTION: Objective structured clinical exams (OSCEs) are a cornerstone of assessing the competence of trainee healthcare professionals, but have been criticised for (1) lacking authenticity, (2) variability in examiners' judgements which can challenge assessment equivalence and (3) for limited diagnosticity of trainees' focal strengths and weaknesses. In response, this study aims to investigate whether (1) sharing integrated-task OSCE stations across institutions can increase perceived authenticity, while (2) enhancing assessment equivalence by enabling comparison of the standard of examiners' judgements between institutions using a novel methodology (video-based score comparison and adjustment (VESCA)) and (3) exploring the potential to develop more diagnostic signals from data on students' performances...
December 7, 2022: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36581438/effectiveness-of-interprofessional-communication-skills-training-for-oncology-teams-study-protocol-for-a-three-arm-cluster-randomised-trial-kommrhein-interpro
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andre Karger, Andrea Petermann-Meyer, Frank Vitinius, Franziska Geiser, Daria Kraus, Luisa Ernsten, Antonia J Mayers, Christian Heuser, Kati Hiltrop, Rebecca Bremen, Ambra Marx, Nicole Ernstmann
INTRODUCTION: Patient-provider communication is an important factor influencing the quality of care in oncology. The study examines the comparative effectiveness of a 10-hour interprofessional communication skills training (CST) programme for physicians and nurses in cancer centres. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: KommRhein Interpro is a cluster-randomised trial sponsored by the German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe, DKH) and conducted at the cancer centres of the university hospitals of Aachen, Bonn, Cologne and Düsseldorf...
December 29, 2022: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36348220/differences-in-us-regional-healthcare-allocation-guidelines-during-the-covid-19-pandemic
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Donald R Sullivan, Nandini Sarma, Catherine L Hough, Richard A Mularski, Molly L Osborne, Kevin M Dirksen, Robert C Macauley
BACKGROUND: Hospitals faced unprecedented scarcity of resources without parallel in modern times during the COVID-19 pandemic. This scarcity led healthcare systems and states to develop or modify scarce resource allocation guidelines that could be implemented during "crisis standards of care" (CSC). CSC describes a significant change in healthcare operations and the level of care provided during a public health emergency. OBJECTIVE: Our study provides a comprehensive examination of the latest CSC guidelines in the western region of the USA, where Alaska and Idaho declared CSC, focusing on ethical issues and health disparities...
November 8, 2022: Journal of General Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36225462/hands-on-practice-on-sustainable-simulators-in-the-context-of-training-for-rural-and-remote-practice-through-a-fundamental-skills-workshop
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samyah Siraj, Mithusa Sivanathan, Sandy Abdo, Julia Micallef, Bruno Gino, Dania Buttu, Krystina M Clarke, Marvin Mnaymneh, Andrei Torres, Gordon Brock, Carla Pereira, Adam Dubrowski
Simulation-based education (SBE) is a sustainable method to allow healthcare professionals to develop competencies in clinical skills that can be difficult to maintain in rural and remote settings. Simulation-based skills training is necessary for healthcare professionals that experience difficulties accessing skills development and maintenance courses to address the needs of rural communities. However, simulators, a key element of simulation, are often prohibitively expensive and follow a "one-size-fits-all" approach...
September 2022: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36210238/experiences-of-parents-and-caregivers-in-pediatric-intensive-care-units-a-qualitative-study
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G Durand, B Branger, V Durier, J-M Liet, G Dabouis, G Picherot, E Cartron, S Blache, E Joram, F Millasseau, E Gratton, V Guilbaud, J Nizard, O Bricaud, B Gaillard-Le Roux
BACKGROUND: In pediatric intensive care units (PICUs), parents and healthcare professionals attend to children who verbally and non-verbally express their pain and suffering, fears, anxieties, desires, and wishes in complex intensive care situations. What can we learn from these experiences to improve the way we can take care of and support children? OBJECTIVES: The main objective of this clinical ethics study was to focus on the experience stories of parents during their child's hospitalization in a PICU, to analyze their discourse, and to propose an ethical perspective...
October 6, 2022: Archives de Pédiatrie: Organe Officiel de la Sociéte Française de Pédiatrie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36121019/when-is-the-use-of-suboptimal-treatment-in-functionally-untreatable-multi-drug-resistant-tuberculosis-morally-permissible
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chavy Arora
Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is well recognised as a serious threat to controlling and ending the TB epidemic. Treatment is time-intensive and costly. Current treatment guidelines recommend the use of at least four effective drugs plus pyrazinamide for a period of 18-24 months. There are, however, situations in which this is not feasible. This may be due to severe patterns of drug-resistance, poor tolerance to the medications, or supply chain issues. In this paper, I use the term functionally untreatable MDR-TB to refer to such situations...
September 18, 2022: Global Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36109038/treatment-of-periprosthetic-joint-infections-guided-by-minimum-biofilm-eradication-concentration-mbec-in-addition-to-minimum-inhibitory-concentration-mic-protocol-for-a-prospective-randomised-clinical-trial
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonatan A N Tillander, Karin Rilby, Karin Svensson Malchau, Susann Skovbjerg, Erika Lindberg, Ola Rolfson, Margarita Trobos
INTRODUCTION: Prosthetic joint infections (PJIs) are disastrous complications for patients and costly for healthcare organisations. They may promote bacterial resistance due to the extensive antibiotic use necessary in the PJI treatment. The PJI incidence is estimated to be 1%-3%, but the absolute numbers worldwide are high and increasing as large joint arthroplasties are performed by the millions each year. Current treatment algorithms, based on implant preserving surgery or full revision followed by a semitailored antibiotic regimen for no less than 2-3 months, lead to infection resolution in approximately 60% and 90%, respectively...
September 15, 2022: BMJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36105856/the-ethical-challenges-of-palliative-care-from-the-perspectives-of-pediatricians-a-qualitative-study-in-iran
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Farzaneh Zahedi, Maliheh Kadivar, Leila Khanali Mojen, Mahsa Asadabadi, Saleheh Tajalli, Mahnaz Ilkhani, Salman Barasteh, Maryam Elahikhah, Bagher Larijani
Background: Adherence to ethical principles is a requirement for palliative care delivery to children and a main concern of healthcare providers. Physicians usually face ethical challenges during their daily practice in hospitals and need adequate skills and the ability to identify and manage them. This study sought to explore the ethical challenges of palliative care from the perspectives of pediatricians. Methods: This qualitative study was conducted between April and July 2019 using the content analysis approach...
2022: Frontiers in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36097342/can-a-structured-model-of-ethical-reflection-be-used-to-teach-ethics-to-nursing-students-an-approach-to-teaching-nursing-students-a-tool-for-systematic-ethical-reflection
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lena Marian Jakobsen, Kjersti Sunde Maehre
BACKGROUND: Nurses encounter many ethical dilemmas in their practice. The ability to make good ethical decisions is a necessary competence in healthcare professions. International studies call for development and research on various methods to teach healthcare professionals ethics. This article describes an approach for learning how to be aware of and discover ethical dilemmas. By applying experienced narratives from healthcare practice and using question guidelines from a structured ethical model, nursing students learn to discover and find possible solutions for ethical problem in their practice...
September 12, 2022: Nursing Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36083315/what-does-the-best-interests-principle-of-the-convention-on-the-rights-of-the-child-mean-for-paediatric-healthcare
#37
REVIEW
Julian W März
The present review analyses the implications of the best interests of the child principle, which is one of the most widely discussed principles of medical ethics and human rights, for paediatric healthcare. As a starting point, it presents the interpretation of the best interests principle by the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child. On this basis, it points out possible fields of application of the best interests principle with regard to paediatric healthcare and discusses the potential difficulties in the application of the best interests principle...
September 9, 2022: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36007671/an-australian-interpretive-description-of-contact-precautions-through-a-bioethical-lens-recommendations-for-ethically-improved-practice
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dr Joanna Harris, Dr Hazel Maxwell, Prof Susan Dodds
BACKGROUND: Contact Precautions (CP) were developed to control multi-resistant organisms (MROs) in hospitals. However, MROs persist and harms are associated with CP. Research objectives were to understand the bioethical impact of CP on patients and health-professionals, and make recommendations for ethically-improved management of MRO-colonised patients. METHOD: Interpretive description methodology scaffolded upon bioethical principles framed this qualitative study...
August 22, 2022: American Journal of Infection Control
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35822188/when-rationing-becomes-inevitable-in-a-pandemic-a-discussion-on-the-ethical-considerations-from-a-public-health-perspective
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuk-Chiu Yip, Ka-Huen Yip, Wai-King Tsui
Objectives: Coronavirus Disease 2019 has presented extreme difficulties to healthcare resource allocation worldwide. Health resources, particularly during a pandemic, are limited even in developed countries. The main challenge for healthcare professionals is to be able to ration resources in an ethical manner. Therefore, this leads to ethical considerations that we aim to discuss in this paper, based on which, recommendations can be made for reference by healthcare management, policymakers, and public health practitioners...
July 8, 2022: Public health in practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35672820/screening-is-not-always-healthy-an-ethical-analysis-of-health-screening-packages-in-singapore
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah Ee Fang Yong, Mee Lian Wong, Teck Chuan Voo
BACKGROUND: Health screening is undertaken to identify individuals who are deemed at higher risk of disease for further diagnostic testing so that they may possibly benefit from interventions to modify the natural course of disease. In Singapore, screening tests are widely available in the form of a package, which bundles multiple tests in one session and commonly includes non-recommended tests. There are various ethical issues associated with such testing as they may not be clinically appropriate and can result in more harm than benefit...
June 7, 2022: BMC Medical Ethics
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