BMC Nursing (Mar 2024)

Inhibitors and facilitators of compliance with professional ethics standards: nurses’ perspective

  • Shahram Sharifi,
  • Hossein Ebrahimi,
  • Shahla Elyaszadeh,
  • Arman Latifi,
  • Mohammad Taghi Khodayari,
  • Maedeh Alizadeh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12912-024-01829-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Introduction The clinical practices of nurses should be in accordance with the principles of professional ethics. Respecting professional ethics principles depends on several factors. The present study was conducted to investigate the effective inhibitors and facilitators in compliance with professional ethics and their importance from the nurses’ perspective. Methods During this cross-sectional descriptive study, 452 nurses were included by the census sampling method. The data were collected via the “inhibitors of compliance with professional ethics standards by the nurses’ perspective” and “facilitators of compliance with professional ethics standards by the nurses’ perspective” questionnaires. Additionally, by designing the “open-ended question” section, other inhibiting and facilitating factors of professional ethics standards from the nurses’ perspective were investigated. The data were analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics (Wilcoxon signed ranks test). Results The individual care-related dimension as a facilitator had the highest mean score compared to the other dimensions (76.62 ± 4.92). Furthermore, seven items in the inhibitor section, 19 items in the facilitator section had higher scores. Among them, there were seven items in common. Strong or weak belief in compliance with ethical issues had the highest mean scores in the role of facilitator and inhibitor (90.54 ± 12.13 and 89.54 ± 14.88, respectively). Conclusion Strong or weak belief in compliance with ethical issues was the most important inhibitor and facilitator from the nurses’ perspective, which makes it necessary to examine individual beliefs about ethical issues among applicants to enter the nursing profession.

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