Ethical conflicts experienced by community nurses: A qualitative study

Author:

Porr Caroline1,Gaudine Alice1,Smith-Young Joanne1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Nursing, Memorial University of Newfoundland

Abstract

Background Despite news reports of morally distressing situations resulting from complex and demanding community-care delivery in Canada, there has been little research on the topic of ethical conflicts experienced by community-based health care professionals. Research aim To identify ethical conflicts experienced by community nurses. Research design Data were collected using semi-structured interviews and then relevant text was extracted and condensed using qualitative content analysis. This research was part of a larger grounded theory project examining how community nurses manage ethical conflict. Research context and participants Community nurses, including 13 public health nurses and 11 home care nurses from two Canadian provinces, were interviewed. Ethical considerations Study approval was granted by the Health Research Ethics Authority of Newfoundland and Labrador and by provincial health authorities. Findings Seven ethical conflicts were identified and assigned to one of two groups. In the grouping categorized as challenges with obligations or risks, the ethical conflicts were: (1) screening for child developmental issues knowing there is a lack of timely early intervention services; (2) encountering inequities in the health care system; (3) not fulfilling principles, goals, and initiatives of primary and secondary prevention; and (4) feeling powerless to advocate for clients. The remaining ethical conflicts were categorized as challenges with process, risks, and consequences, and were: (5) jeopardizing therapeutic relationships while reporting signs of a child at risk; (6) managing confidentiality when neighbors are clients; and (7) supporting client autonomy and decision-making but uncertain of the consequences. Conclusions Research investigation will continue to be important to raise awareness and mobilize ethics supports as health care services are steadily shifted from institutional to community settings. Moreover, with heightened potential for communicable disease outbreaks across international borders from global warming, community nurses around the world will continue to be required to address ethically-difficult care situations with competence and compassion.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference26 articles.

1. How Community Nurses Manage Ethical Conflicts: A Grounded Theory Study

2. Canadian Nurses Association. Code of ethics for registered nurses. https://www.cna-aiic.ca/en/nursing/regulated-nursing-in-canada/nursing-ethics (2017, accessed 12 Mar 2023).

3. Kupfer M. After 73 years of marriage, this couple is forced to live apart. CBC News, 30 January 2023, np.

4. The Canadian Press. Ontario could face charter challenge over law forcing elderly hospital patients into nursing homes. CBC News, 21 Nov 2022, np.

5. Bergen R. Home-care workers cite a litany of systematic failures in letter to Winnipeg widower denied palliative care. CBC News, 24 Feb 2023, np.

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