Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State

Background: It is imperative to know whether the students who have undergone a specific training perceive themselves as confident and competent in handling ethical dilemmas, in the face of contemporary ethical challenges. Such evaluation is significant especially for nursing and midwifery students w...

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Main Author: Moliehi R. Mpeli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-08-01
Series:Curationis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1925
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spelling doaj-68079adbd0f64e1c8aba2bdd6140a6882020-11-24T22:17:21ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792018-08-01411e1e910.4102/curationis.v41i1.19251367Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free StateMoliehi R. Mpeli0School of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Free StateBackground: It is imperative to know whether the students who have undergone a specific training perceive themselves as confident and competent in handling ethical dilemmas, in the face of contemporary ethical challenges. Such evaluation is significant especially for nursing and midwifery students who have undergone training that stipulates adherence to a code of ethics and professional norms. At present, such knowledge is limited, and this has an impact for ethics education. Objectives: The article aims to describe the self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students and to contrast the findings to the content of the ethics instruction received. Based on outcomes, the article aims to convey the claim to nursing institutions that current strategies that rely on teaching nursing ethics without appraising the context of a situation are ineffective in fostering ethical competence amongst students. Method: This study made use of a set of self-reflection reports in which the midwifery nursing students narrated their experiences in handling ethical issues. Results: Analysis of the self-reflective reports revealed that one of the three dimensions of ethical competence was limited. There was evidence of moral perception, moral action and substandard moral reasoning. The principles that were mostly referred to within the narratives were autonomy and beneficence. Conclusion: The findings support the argument that teaching principlism and enforcing a code of ethics without contextualising it coerces the student to conform without questioning their beliefs. Thus, ethical competence amongst the midwifery students may be described in terms of compliance to principles with limited reflection on the situation as a whole.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1925Self-evaluationethical competencemoral dimensionsPrinciplism and code of ethics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Moliehi R. Mpeli
spellingShingle Moliehi R. Mpeli
Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
Curationis
Self-evaluation
ethical competence
moral dimensions
Principlism and code of ethics
author_facet Moliehi R. Mpeli
author_sort Moliehi R. Mpeli
title Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
title_short Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
title_full Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
title_fullStr Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the Free State
title_sort analysis of self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students at a selected nursing college in the free state
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Background: It is imperative to know whether the students who have undergone a specific training perceive themselves as confident and competent in handling ethical dilemmas, in the face of contemporary ethical challenges. Such evaluation is significant especially for nursing and midwifery students who have undergone training that stipulates adherence to a code of ethics and professional norms. At present, such knowledge is limited, and this has an impact for ethics education. Objectives: The article aims to describe the self-evaluated ethical competence of midwifery students and to contrast the findings to the content of the ethics instruction received. Based on outcomes, the article aims to convey the claim to nursing institutions that current strategies that rely on teaching nursing ethics without appraising the context of a situation are ineffective in fostering ethical competence amongst students. Method: This study made use of a set of self-reflection reports in which the midwifery nursing students narrated their experiences in handling ethical issues. Results: Analysis of the self-reflective reports revealed that one of the three dimensions of ethical competence was limited. There was evidence of moral perception, moral action and substandard moral reasoning. The principles that were mostly referred to within the narratives were autonomy and beneficence. Conclusion: The findings support the argument that teaching principlism and enforcing a code of ethics without contextualising it coerces the student to conform without questioning their beliefs. Thus, ethical competence amongst the midwifery students may be described in terms of compliance to principles with limited reflection on the situation as a whole.
topic Self-evaluation
ethical competence
moral dimensions
Principlism and code of ethics
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1925
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