An inquiry into moral virtues, especially compassion, in psychiatric nurses: findings from a Delphi study
Armstrong, A. E., Parsons, S., & Barker, P. J. (2000). An inquiry into moral virtues, especially compassion, in psychiatric nurses: findings from a Delphi study. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 7 (4): 297-305.
Abstract: A three-round Delphi study was conducted to gather data on ethical
reasoning among psychiatric nurses (N = 26 in round one (R1),
decreasing to N = 14 in the final round (R3)). Transcripts of
questionnaires were carefully read and compared. Responses were
manually sorted into categories, themes and patterns of interest. Eight
debates emerged from the data. This article discusses two in detail:
the nature of moral virtues and the meaning of compassion in
psychiatric nursing. A sympathetic overview of virtue ethics is also
provided. The nurses' responses included a lot of virtue terms, such
as, 'honest', 'fair', and 'care". However, 'nurses' moral virtues' was
ranked low in importance as a notion invoked in ethical decision making
in the round-one ranking exercise. Only half of the sample believed
that the moral character of a psychiatric nurse is important in ethical
decision-making. Further, most of the round-one sample thought the
virtues could not be acquired. Compassion was identified as crucial to
psychiatric nursing and the nurse-client relationship, though, as
expected, many diverse meanings were attributed to this notion. While
the Delphi method proved adequate for our purposes, problems with
regard to accurately understanding the respondents' intended meanings
highlighted a major weakness of this technique, in common with other
methods relying on questionnaires. Further inquiry is needed regarding
the role of moral virtues and virtue ethics in both psychiatric nursing
and nurse education.
Source: PubMed
(Something interesting I found)Posted: Tuesday, August 01, 2000
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