Primary caregivers need to be financially supported by the relevant organizations. Care skills training and providing palliative care seem helpful in reducing the pain and the burden of family caregivers for patients with breast cancer.
Considering the significant inverse relationship between the score of patient quality care and the dimension of moral conflict experience, it seems when nurses make moral decisions, they experience a conflict between personal and professional values in their careers and thus experience moral tension. If this tension is not resolved properly, it can provide a way for them to distance themselves from patients, thereby making nurses indifferent to moral care.
The broad spectrum of problems caused by caring for a patient with mental illness imposes a high burden on family caregivers. This can affect how they cope with their mentally ill family members. Identifying caregivers' experiences of barriers to coping is necessary to develop a program to help them overcome these challenges. This qualitative content analysis study explored barriers impeding family caregivers' ability to cope with their relatives diagnosed with severe mental illness (defined here as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorders, and bipolar affective disorders). Sixteen family caregivers were recruited using purposive sampling and interviewed using a semi-structured in-depth interview method. Data were analyzed by a conventional content analytic approach. Findings consisted of four major categories: the patient's isolation from everyday life, incomplete recovery, lack of support by the mental health care system, and stigmatization. Findings highlight the necessity of providing support for caregivers by the mental health care delivery service system.
Introduction: The quality of care affects patients’ satisfaction. To provide high quality care,
nurses face ethical challenges in daily practice. Moral sensitivity is the first phase in moral
implementation. This study aimed to determine the relationship between nurses’ moral sensitivity
and patients’ satisfaction in medical wards.
Methods: In descriptive correlational study 198 nurses and 198 patients in 17 medical wards
filled out the Moral Sensitivity Questionnaire (MSQ) and Patient Satisfaction with Nursing Care
Quality Questionnaire (PSNCQQ), respectively. Nurses were sampled by the census method.
For each nurse, a patient was selected randomly from the same ward. Data were analyzed using
SPSS version 13.
Results: The highest scores were in the dimensions of “relational orientation” and “following the
rules”, and the lowest scores were in the dimensions of “autonomy” and “experiencing moral
conflicts”. The highest level of patients’ satisfaction was with “nurses’ professional performance”
3.98 (1.09), and the lowest level was with “nurses’ routine work” 2.69 (1.22). There was no
significant relationship between the mean of patient satisfaction and moral sensitivity of nurses.
Conclusion: Considering that nurses had a higher score in dimension of “following the rules”
and a lower score in dimension of “autonomy”, it seems ethical performance in the real situation
is not merely due to the nurses’ moral sensitivity and it seems the complexity of the organization
causes nurses face difficulties in making decisions related to clinical practice; therefore, policy
makers in the health system should be able to identify barriers.
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