Political action in nursing and medical codes of ethics.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q1 NURSING Nursing Inquiry Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-07 DOI:10.1111/nin.12658
Ryan Essex, Lydia Mainey, Jess Dillard-Wright, Sarah Richardson
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Abstract

Political action has a long history in the health workforce. There are multiple historical examples, from civil disobedience to marches and even sabotage that can be attributed to health workers. Such actions remain a feature of the healthcare community to this day; their status with professional and regulatory bodies is far less clear, however. This has created uncertainty for those undertaking such action, particularly those who are engaged in what could be termed 'contentious' forms of action. This study explored how advocacy and activism were presented in nursing and medical codes of ethics, comparing disciplinary and temporo-spatial differences to understand how such action may be promoted or constrained by codes. The data for this study comes from 217 codes of ethics. Because of the size of the corpus and to facilitate analysis, natural language processing was utilised, which allowed for an automated exploration of the data and for comparisons to be drawn between groups. This was complemented by a manual search and contextualisation of the data. While there were noticeable differences between medical and nursing codes, overall, advocacy, activism and even politics were rarely discussed explicitly in most codes. When such action was spoken about, this was often vague and imprecise with codes speaking of 'political action' and 'advocacy' in general terms. While some codes were far more forthright in what they meant about advocacy or broader political action (i.e., Nursing codes in Denmark, Norway, Canada) more forceful language that spoke in specific terms or in terms of oppositional or specific actions (e.g., civil disobedience or marches) was almost completely avoided. These results are discussed in relation to the broader literature on codes and the normative questions they raise, namely whether such action should be included in codes of ethics at all.

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护理和医学伦理守则中的政治行动。
卫生工作者的政治行动由来已久。从非暴力反抗到游行示威,甚至是卫生工作者的破坏活动,历史上有许多这样的例子。时至今日,此类行动仍是医疗界的一个特色;然而,它们在专业和监管机构中的地位却远不那么明确。这给开展此类行动的人员,尤其是那些参与可被称为 "有争议 "形式行动的人员带来了不确定性。本研究探讨了倡导和行动主义在护理和医学伦理守则中的表现形式,比较了学科和时空差异,以了解此类行动如何受到守则的促进或限制。本研究的数据来自 217 部伦理守则。由于语料库规模庞大,为了便于分析,我们使用了自然语言处理技术,从而实现了对数据的自动探索和组间比较。此外,还对数据进行了人工搜索和语境化处理。虽然医疗和护理代码之间存在明显差异,但总体而言,大多数代码很少明确讨论宣传、行动主义甚至政治。即使谈到这类行动,也往往是含糊不清、不准确的,只是笼统地谈论 "政治行动 "和 "宣传"。虽然有些准则对宣传或更广泛的政治行动(如丹麦、挪威和加拿大的护理准则)的含义表述得更为直截了当,但几乎完全避免了使用具体的或以反对或具体行动(如非暴力反抗或游行)为措辞的更为有力的语言。这些结果将结合有关守则的更广泛的文献及其提出的规范性问题,即是否应将此类行 动纳入伦理守则,加以讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Nursing Inquiry
Nursing Inquiry 医学-护理
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
13.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing Inquiry aims to stimulate examination of nursing''s current and emerging practices, conditions and contexts within an expanding international community of ideas. The journal aspires to excite thinking and stimulate action toward a preferred future for health and healthcare by encouraging critical reflection and lively debate on matters affecting and influenced by nursing from a range of disciplinary angles, scientific perspectives, analytic approaches, social locations and philosophical positions.
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