Moral sensitivity components identified among nurses from Intensive Care Units

ABSTRACT Objective: to identify ethical problems from the components of moral sensitivity among nurses of Intensive Care Units. Method: qualitative, exploratory-descriptive study developed in a hospital in the South of Brazil with 19 nurses working in intensive care units through semi-structured interviews that were analyzed through discursive textual analysis. Results: ethical education, dialogue, relationships with other health team members, professional autonomy, knowledge, personal values, effective communication, leadership and patients' positive outcomes were identified as important components of nurses' moral sensitivity, and comprise the domains of moral consciousness, benevolent motivation, and spontaneous moral perception. Final considerations: the components of moral sensitivity identified in this study facilitate nurses' instrumentalization in the face of decision making and ethical problems in the intensive care setting.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schallenberger,Cláudia Denise, Tomaschewski-Barlem,Jamila Geri, Barlem,Edison Luiz Devos, Rocha,Laurelize Pereira, Dalmolin,Graziele de Lima, Pereira,Liliane Alves
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Enfermagem 2019
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-71672019000700002
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Summary:ABSTRACT Objective: to identify ethical problems from the components of moral sensitivity among nurses of Intensive Care Units. Method: qualitative, exploratory-descriptive study developed in a hospital in the South of Brazil with 19 nurses working in intensive care units through semi-structured interviews that were analyzed through discursive textual analysis. Results: ethical education, dialogue, relationships with other health team members, professional autonomy, knowledge, personal values, effective communication, leadership and patients' positive outcomes were identified as important components of nurses' moral sensitivity, and comprise the domains of moral consciousness, benevolent motivation, and spontaneous moral perception. Final considerations: the components of moral sensitivity identified in this study facilitate nurses' instrumentalization in the face of decision making and ethical problems in the intensive care setting.