2015
DOI: 10.1177/0969733015603442
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Clear conscience grounded in relations: Expressions of Persian-speaking nurses in Sweden

Abstract: Cultural frameworks and the context of practice needed to be considered in interpreting the meaning of conscience and clear conscience.

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Cited by 18 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Another explanation could be related to the ways in which nurses with Swedish compared to Iranian backgrounds understood the conscience. Nurses with Iranian backgrounds were revealed to perceive the conscience as an inner guide which should be followed and that a clear conscience is linked to relationships and in connecting with the people they care for. To maintain a clear conscience, nurses with Iranian background listened to the inner voice of their conscience, while Swedish nursing staff have stated that the conscience can sometimes give out the wrong signals .…”
Section: Comprehensive Interpretation and Reflectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Another explanation could be related to the ways in which nurses with Swedish compared to Iranian backgrounds understood the conscience. Nurses with Iranian backgrounds were revealed to perceive the conscience as an inner guide which should be followed and that a clear conscience is linked to relationships and in connecting with the people they care for. To maintain a clear conscience, nurses with Iranian background listened to the inner voice of their conscience, while Swedish nursing staff have stated that the conscience can sometimes give out the wrong signals .…”
Section: Comprehensive Interpretation and Reflectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The participants did not refer specifically to any professional ethics, but talked about the older people who they cared for as though they had been relatives. Having a clear conscience was grounded in the relationships that the ENs established with their care recipients from their home country . In previous studies, ENs referred to external factors in their profession as being sources of having a troubled conscience, such as lack of time to deliver good care , the influence of workload on their private lives , hardship in allocating their limited time to the most needed ones , endeavours to follow the care guidelines and witnessing disturbing conflicts among co‐workers .…”
Section: Comprehensive Interpretation and Reflectionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Ancak kölelerin vizesiz yolculuk etmeleri yasaktı. 50 Çok sık kullanılan yolları tercih ediyorlardı. Kendilerine bazı bölgeleri dinlenme yerleri olarak belirlemişlerdi.…”
Section: İpek Yolu'nda Kervanlarunclassified
“…In many studies, including Lamb et al, conscience was introduced as a commanding authority issuing a warning signal depending on the subject’s culture and context ( 3 ). Other studies described conscience as the cornerstone of ethics ( 4 , 8 ). When nurses follow their conscience to provide quality care, their interpretation of conscience is positive; otherwise, conscientious conflict causes a troubled conscience that can be associated with the feeling of guilt ( 9 , 10 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%