Aim: To describe how nurses' moral competence can be supported from the perspective of nurses, nurse managers, researchers, educators, and nursing students.
Background: Moral competence is the capacity or ability of nurses to recognise one's own emotions of what is right or wrong, to reflect on these emotions, to make decisions, and to act in ways that bring the highest level of benefit to patients. Moral competence is part of professional competence. However, little is known about how nurses' moral competence can be supported.
Methods: A qualitative descriptive study design was applied. Stratified purposive sampling was employed and focus group discussions were conducted in Belgium, Cyprus, Finland, Greece, Ireland, and Italy in 2023. A total of 38 informants (5-8 per focus group) who were registered nurses or nursing students participated. The data were analysed using both deductive and inductive content analysis. The COnsolidated criteria for REporting Qualitative research were adhered to.
Results: Seven themes were developed following analysis, which suggested that support for nurses' moral competence can be located at individual-relational, organisational, and societal levels. Several approaches and/or tools were also identified to support moral competence.
Conclusion: Nurses' moral competence could benefit from continuous support from colleagues, those in leadership positions, organisations and society. Practical tools and approaches can also successfully support nurses' moral competence.
Implications For Nursing And Health Policy: Support for nurses' moral competence forms a continuum from the beginning of nursing studies throughout nursing careers. Thus, educational interventions and training programmes are needed both at basic and continuous ethics education. There is also a need for investments in and development of strategies and regulations on ethics management in health systems, national- and international-level ethics indicators for health policy-making, and implementation of existing practices, interventions, and procedures in nursing practice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/inr.13080 | DOI Listing |
BMC Psychol
December 2024
Department of Management Information Systems, College of Business Administration, Prince Sattam Bin Abdulaziz University, 165 Al-Kharj 11942, Al-Kharj, Saudi Arabia.
Background: Grounding on the Resource-Based View (RBV) and organization support theory (OST), this study examines the effect of talent management practice (TMP) on perceived organizational support (POS), organizational performance (OP), and employee performance (EP) within the Jordanian telecom sector, with a specific focus on the mediating effect of POS's between TMP-EP and OP relationship.
Methods: This study uses a cross-sectional method to collect data from 397 personnel at three Jordanian telecom enterprises. The Smart-PLS application assisted with structural equation modeling, which was used to examine the data.
BMJ Paediatr Open
December 2024
Department of Community Paediatrics, South Western Sydney Local Health District, Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia.
Background: The Convention on the Rights of the Child states that children need to be protected from 'any work that is likely to be hazardous or to interfere with the child's education, or to be harmful to the child's health or physical, mental, spiritual, moral or social development'. We aimed to determine the prevalence and correlates of child labour in five low-income African countries using the sixth wave of UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS6).
Methods: Data on child labour, reported by the household respondent for a randomly selected child (5-17 years), were extracted from MICS6 reports from Chad, Guinea Bissau, Malawi, Sierra Leone and Togo.
J Environ Manage
December 2024
Graduate School of International Cultural Studies, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan. Electronic address:
Saving domestic water has become one of the most important policy targets in addressing the increasing shortage of fresh water worldwide. Culture plays a significant role in people's behaviors including how they tend to use water at home. This study aims to explore the effect of culture on domestic water saving.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Psychol
December 2024
Peking University, Guanghua Building, No. 5 Yiheyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing, 100871, China.
Experiences of awe, frequently elicited by the natural world (but also by art, music, human virtue, among other things), are profound and transformative. We argue that beyond its individual benefits, awe serves a vital social function: It expands an individual's perspective from narrow self-interest to others' needs and collective concerns. We review recent empirical evidence showcasing how awe shifts focus away from the self toward the larger entities one belongs to.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsy Behav
December 2024
Child and Adolescent Neurology Service, Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Antioquia, Pediaciencias Research Group, Medellín, Colombia. Electronic address:
Introduction: The influence of the Enlightenment is evident with the mention of Herman Boerhave. The strong European influence draws attention with minimal expression of the social and medical concepts of pre-Colombian cultures such as the Aztec and Mayan.
Methods: A medical and cultural conceptual analysis of the text "Medical-moral report of the very painful, and rigorous disease of epilepsy" is carried out.
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