A concept analysis was performed on surgical conscience in perioperative nursing using the Penrod and Hupcey principle-based method. The analysis included framing surgical conscience according to the epistemological, pragmatic, linguistic, and logical principles and showed that surgical conscience falls into several domains, including nursing, surgery, anesthesiology, surgical technology, and interventional radiology. Although some perioperative nurses consider surgical conscience a fundamental principle in the OR, there is limited published literature on how surgical conscience is introduced, learned, improved, or measured. The literature search for this concept analysis did not produce a published operationalization of the concept. Therefore, this concept analysis provides a comprehensive definition of surgical conscience to guide the future research that is needed to reinforce surgical conscience and prevent conceptual dogma-a situation in which attributes of a concept lack the support of additional investigation but are still used and reinforced over time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/aorn.13827 | DOI Listing |
J Law Med
November 2024
Barrister, Castan Chambers, Melbourne, Australia; Professor of Law and Professorial Fellow in Psychiatry, University of Melbourne; Honorary Professor of Forensic Medicine, Monash; Adjunct Professor, Southern Cross University.
This editorial reviews the changes over two decades in the United States and Australia in relation to the law governing access to drugs enabling medical termination of pregnancy. It also scrutinises three contentious decisions by the United States Supreme Court between 2022 and 2024 in relation to abortion. It argues that the receptive environment in the United States Supreme Court, as it is currently constituted, to challenges to the lawfulness of terminations of pregnancy and abortion medications is likely to inspire comparable challenges as part of the "Abortion Wars" in other countries, including Australia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
December 2024
Global Bioethics Collaborative, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Conscientious objection is a critical topic that has been sparsely discussed from a global health perspective, despite its special relevance to our inherently diverse field. In this Analysis paper, we argue that blanket prohibitions of a specific type of non-discriminatory conscientious objection are unjustified in the global health context. We begin both by introducing a nuanced account of conscience that is grounded in moral psychology and by providing an overview of discriminatory and non-discriminatory forms of objection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Care Anal
September 2024
Law School, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
Providers are essential to the delivery of abortion care. Yet, they often occupy an ambiguous space in political discourse around abortion. The introduction of a new abortion service in Ireland invites us to look afresh at providers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Nurs
August 2024
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Shohadaye Haft-e Tir Hospital, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Background: Troubled conscience results from the lack of attention to the voice of conscience. Regarding the fact that ICU healthcare workers are constantly faced with stressful and challenging situations, they often experience a troubled conscience.
Aim: This study aimed to explain the factors leading to troubled conscience and identify the consequences of troubled conscience among ICU nurses.
"Conscientious provision" refers to situations in which clinicians wish to provide legal and professionally accepted treatments prohibited within their (usually Catholic) health care institutions. It mirrors "conscientious objection," which refers to situations in which clinicians refuse to provide legal and professionally accepted treatments offered within their (usually secular) health care institutions. Conscientious provision is not protected by law, but conscientious objection is.
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