AI Article Synopsis

  • Healthcare professionals in paediatric oncology face moral challenges, and clinical ethics support services like moral case deliberation (MCD) are designed to help them navigate these issues.
  • A study investigated the perceptions of healthcare professionals regarding the importance of potential outcomes of MCDs, revealing high ratings for improved communication and ethical analysis skills.
  • Variations in perceptions were noted among different professional roles and institutions, with nursing assistants generally valuing MCD outcomes more highly than physicians, while women and those without prior MCD experience also rated outcomes as more important.

Article Abstract

Background: In paediatric oncology, healthcare professionals face moral challenges. Clinical ethics support services, such as moral case deliberation (MCD), aim to assist them in dealing with these challenges. Yet, healthcare professionals can have different expectations and goals related to clinical ethics support services.

Methods: In this study, the perceptions held by healthcare professionals (nursing assistants, registered nurses, physicians, and others) regarding the importance of possible outcomes of MCDs, prior to implementation of MCDs, were investigated. A multisite, cross-sectional, quantitative study was performed at all six Paediatric Oncology Centres in Sweden. Healthcare professionals answered the Euro-MCD instrument with 26 potential MCD outcomes using a scale from Not important (1) to Very important (4). Descriptive and comparative statistical analyses were carried out.

Results: All outcomes were rated high, i.e., between 3.12 and 3.78. More open communication, developing skills to analyse ethically difficult situations, better mutual understanding, and deciding on concrete actions were rated as most important. Understanding of ethical theories and critical examination of policies were rated less important. Most often nursing assistants rated higher and physicians lower than the other professions did. Women and participants without previous experience of MCDs perceived outcomes as more important. There were differences between centres as one centre had significantly higher, and one centre had significantly lower ratings compared to the others.

Conclusion: It is clear that healthcare professionals want MCDs to improve teamwork and skills in order to analyse and manage ethically difficult situations. When comparing to previous research about important MCD outcomes, there were similarities in what healthcare professionals consider to be important when handling moral challenges regardless of country and potential differences in healthcare settings and systems, such as paediatric vs. adult care.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9652809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12910-022-00851-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

healthcare professionals
28
paediatric oncology
12
moral case
8
healthcare
8
moral challenges
8
clinical ethics
8
ethics support
8
nursing assistants
8
mcd outcomes
8
ethically difficult
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!