16 research outputs found

    Social and ethical criteria for prioritizing patients: a survey of students and health professionals in Portugal

    Get PDF
    O estudo quali-quantitativo explora o dilema Ă©tico da microalocação dos recursos da saĂșde. Objetiva identificar e comparar a opiniĂŁo de dois grupos da sociedade portuguesa - estudantes e profissionais de saĂșde sobre a importĂąncia das caracterĂ­sticas pessoais dos pacientes no momento de os priorizar e se as escolhas se explicam por referenciais bioĂ©ticos de carĂĄter utilitaristas ou deontolĂłgicos. Os dados foram recolhidos atravĂ©s de um questionĂĄrio aplicado a uma amostra de 180 estudantes universitĂĄrios e 60 profissionais de saĂșde. Os respondentes perante hipotĂ©ticos cenĂĄ- rios de emergĂȘncia clĂ­nica tiveram de escolher de entre dois pacientes (distinguidos por idade, sexo, responsabilidade social, situação econĂłmica e laboral, comportamentos lesivos da saĂșde e registo criminal) quem tratar e justificar a escolha. Foram usados testes estatĂ­sticos de associação para comparar as respostas dos dois grupos e anĂĄlise de conteĂșdo para categorizar as justificaçÔes. Os resultados sugerem a existĂȘncia de diferenças nas escolhas dos dois grupos, com os profissionais de saĂșde a revelarem aceitar menos a utilização de critĂ©rios sociais em contexto de escassez e coexistĂȘncia de critĂ©rios utilitaristas e deontolĂłgicos, com predomĂ­nio da eficiĂȘncia por parte dos profissionais de saĂșde e da equidade por parte dos estudantesThis qualitative/quantitative study examines the ethical dilemma of microallocation of health resources. It seeks to identify and compare the opinion of two groups in Portuguese society – students and health professionals – on the importance of personal characteristics of patients at the moment of prioritizing them and if the choices can be explained by bioethical references of a utilitarian or deontological nature. Data were collected by means of a questionnaire administered to a sample of 180 students and 60 health professionals. Faced with hypothetical emergency scenarios, the respondents had to choose between two patients (distinguished by: age, gender, social responsibility, economic and employment situation, harmful health behaviors and criminal record), duly selecting who to treat and then justifying their choice. The results suggest the existence of differences in choices between the two groups, with health professionals revealing they are less prepared to accept the use of social criteria in a context of scarce resources and co-existence of utilitarian and deontological criteria, with a predominance of efficiency on the part of health professionals and equity on the part of students.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Finnish nurses' attitudes towards their role in the euthanasia process

    No full text
    BACKGROUND: Nurses' voices remain unheard in most debates about euthanasia, although their crucial role in the euthanasia process is widely acknowledged. Moreover, in Canadian euthanasia law, nurses have a more active role, which further highlights the need for knowledge about nurses' attitudes towards their role in the euthanasia process. RESEARCH QUESTIONS: What are Finnish nurses' attitudes towards their potential role in the euthanasia process? Which characteristics are associated with those attitudes? RESEARCH DESIGN: Cross-sectional web-based survey. PARTICIPANTS AND RESEARCH CONTEXT: 1003 nurses, recruited via social media and the members' bulletin of the Finnish Nurses Association. ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS: Ethical approval was obtained from the Committee on Research Ethics of the university to which the first author was affiliated. FINDINGS: The great majority (85.2%) of nurses felt that their perspective should be considered in decision-making related to euthanasia. Furthermore, most of the participants (74.7%) reported willingness to participate in the euthanasia process if it were legal, and 88.6% agreed that a nurse should be present when euthanasia is performed if the patient wishes so. Furthermore, over half agreed that some of the preparatory tasks were part of their job description. However, a minority (32.9%) agreed with a possible obligation to participate based on their profession. Nurses' age, religiosity and educational level influenced their attitudes in the current results. DISCUSSION: Despite the strong agreement on decision-making concerning euthanasia and participation in the euthanasia process, obligation to participate based on the profession was rejected by most participants. Nurses regarded themselves as consultants in the decision-making process, which may indicate their unwillingness to share the responsibility for the decision itself. CONCLUSION: Specific safety mechanisms should be considered to protect nurses who refuse to be involved in the euthanasia process due to harm that involuntary participation might cause.status: Published onlin
    corecore