Saudi pediatric residents’ confidence in handling ethical situations and factors influencing it

Q2 Medicine
Bedoor H. Al Qadrah , Abdullah M. Al-Saleh , Abdulla Al-Sayyari
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

During their residency program, pediatric residents frequently face ethical challenges. The aim of the study is to evaluate the pediatric residents’ knowledge and confidence to handle common ethical dilemmas during their training.

Methods

This is a survey-based cross-sectional study on all pediatric residents in the largest pediatric training center in Saudi Arabia. The survey had six sections: a) Demographics and self-assessment of religiosity, b) Sources of ethics education, c) Degree of confidence in dealing with ethical challenges in clinical practice, d) Rating of the quality of ethics education during residency, e) Agreement or disagreement regarding ten ethical scenarios, and f) Confidence level in handling 21 different ethical situations.

The response to the survey questions was based on a Likert scale; the survey was electronically distributed to all pediatrics residents. Mean knowledge scores and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated for each independent variable to test for associations. Comparisons were made using an independent t-test or an ANOVA test when there were more than two groups.

Result

Eighty residents responded to the study (85.1% response rate). Over 60% reported that the best source of ethical education for them was through discussions with a senior physician and it was through formal lecturers in 13.8%. One-fifth felt confident in dealing with ethical challenges. Only 2.5% rated the ethics education as “very good/excellent” and 12.5% rated the “support from residency program for ethics education” as being “very good/excellent.” Agreement of more than 80% was only noted for 4 of 10 of the ethical scenarios. Overall, only 16.4% felt “confident/extremely confident” in handling different ethical situations while 38.5% felt “not confident/a little confident” with more confidence among male residents (35.3% versus 18.7% p = 0.01). Marital status, year of residency, religiosity, and source of ethics knowledge had no impact on the level of confidence.

Conclusion

Overall, the ethics education was considered inadequate. Only one fifth had the confidence in dealing with ethical situations. Gender but not marital status, year of residency, religiosity, or source of ethics knowledge had an impact on the level of confidence in handling ethical situations.

Abstract Image

沙特儿科住院医师处理道德状况的信心及其影响因素
在他们的住院医师项目中,儿科住院医师经常面临伦理挑战。本研究旨在评估儿科住院医师在培训过程中处理常见伦理困境的知识和信心。方法这是一项基于调查的横断面研究,研究对象是沙特阿拉伯最大的儿科培训中心的所有儿科住院医师。调查包括六个部分:a)人口统计和宗教信仰的自我评估,b)伦理教育的来源,c)处理临床实践中伦理挑战的信心程度,d)住院医师伦理教育质量评级,e)对10个伦理情景的同意或不同意,f)处理21个不同伦理情景的信心水平。对调查问题的回答基于李克特量表;该调查以电子方式分发给所有儿科住院医师。计算每个自变量的平均知识得分和95%置信区间(CI)以检验相关性。当有两个以上的组时,使用独立t检验或ANOVA检验进行比较。结果共有80名居民参与调查,回复率为85.1%。超过60%的人报告说,对他们来说,最好的道德教育来源是通过与资深医生的讨论,13.8%的人是通过正式的讲师。五分之一的受访者有信心应对道德挑战。只有2.5%的人认为伦理教育“非常好/优秀”,12.5%的人认为“住院医师项目对伦理教育的支持”“非常好/优秀”。在10个道德场景中,只有4个场景的一致性超过80%。整体而言,只有16.4%的受访者对处理不同的道德情况感到“有信心/非常有信心”,而38.5%的受访者表示“没有信心/有点信心”,其中男性受访者的信心更高(35.3%比18.7% p = 0.01)。婚姻状况、居住年份、宗教信仰和伦理知识来源对信心水平没有影响。结论总体而言,高校德育工作存在不足。只有五分之一的人对处理道德问题有信心。性别而非婚姻状况、居住年份、宗教信仰或伦理知识来源对处理伦理问题的信心水平有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
International Journal of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
17 weeks
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