Clinical simulation is used in nursing education and in other health professional programs to prepare students for future clinical practice. Simulation can be used to teach students communication skills and how to deliver bad news to patients and families. However, skilled communication in clinical practice requires students to move beyond simply learning superficial communication techniques and behaviors. This article presents an unexplored concept in the simulation literature: the exercise of moral imagination by the health professional student. Drawing from the works of Hume, Aristotle and Gadamer, a conceptualization of moral imagination is first provided. Next, this article argues that students must exercise moral imagination on two levels: towards the direct communication exchange before them; and to the representative nature of simulation encounters. Last, the limits of moral imagination in simulation-based education are discussed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969733010386163 | DOI Listing |
Nurse Educ Pract
December 2024
Department of Anthropology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Electronic address:
Aim: To document, over sixty-eight years from 1956 to 2023, the educational experiences and life choices of forty women in a Canadian baccalaureate nursing program. The longitudinal research spans initial expectations, the educational process, the commitment to a moral culture, the phase of marriage and domesticity, the ultimate choice of careers and culminating in decisions about the profession.
Background: Studies of baccalaureate nursing students has not linked early imaginings to education and its difficulties, or to later life and careers.
Anxiety Stress Coping
November 2024
School of Psychology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Background And Objectives: Morally horrific events can evoke moral pain and may result in a type of psychological distress known as moral injury (MI). Previous research has hypothesized intolerance of uncertainty (IU; ) may predict MI symptomatology due to its influence on perceived responsibility (PR). As such, we examined the influence of IU and PR on moral emotions associated with vignettes depicting morally stressful events.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pers Soc Psychol
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan.
How does living in an environment with many or few family relatives shape our psychology? Here, we draw upon ideas from behavioral ecology to explore the psychological effects of ecological relatedness-the prevalence of family relatives in one's environment. We present six studies, both correlational and experimental, that examine this. In general, people and populations that live in ecologies with more family relatives (Studies 1-4b), or who imagine themselves to be living in such ecologies (Studies 2/3a/3b/4b), engage in more extreme pro-group behavior (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Rev Psychol
October 2024
2Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
The imagination is central to human social life but undervalued worldwide and underexplored in psychology. Here, we offer Possible Worlds Theory as a synthetic theory of the imagination. We first define the imagination, mapping the mental states it touches, from dreams and hallucinations to satire and fiction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Soc Psychol Bull
October 2024
Department of Psychology, University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY, USA.
Humanity's long-term welfare may lie in the hands of those who are presently living, raising the question of whether people today hold the generations of tomorrow in their moral circles. Five studies (N = 1652; Prolific) reveal present-oriented bias in the moral standing of future generations, with greater perceived moral obligation, moral concern, and prosocial intentions for proximal relative to distal future targets. Yet, present-oriented bias appears stronger for socially close compared with socially distant targets and for human targets relative to non-human animals and entities in nature.
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