Literature DB >> 21371248

Integrity: is it still relevant to modern healthcare?

Stephen Tyreman1.   

Abstract

Personal integrity is often seen as a core value for delivering ethical healthcare. This paper will explore what this might mean and particularly what place integrity has in a multi-professional healthcare system. Two opposing arguments can be made: the first is that the multi-professional nature of modern healthcare means that personal integrity is at best a futile luxury and at worst, an obstacle to delivering affordable high-quality care to large populations. The converse is that without personal integrity healthcare loses its humanity and becomes mere biological and social engineering. Part of the analysis rests on whether integrity is primarily a personally held moral framework or whether it is a social concept. Chester Calhoun's analysis, in which she identifies the integrated-self, personal identity, and (morally) clean-hands as three pictures of integrity, is used as the basis for suggesting that integrity is a rich and complex social virtue through which the individual is able to demonstrate their relationship with the values and mores of the communities of which they are members. In addition, I will argue that integrity is not a value itself, but is a framework through which one or more sets of those values that characterize the communities of which the person is a part, can be expressed. Because a person may belong to many communities - nation, gender, religion, family, profession, trade, sport, etc. - each individual has their own unique meta-set of values that informs their personal sense of integrity. However, in specific circumstances, conflicts may arise between this personal global sense and the set of values associated with one community.
© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21371248     DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-769X.2011.00486.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nurs Philos        ISSN: 1466-7681            Impact factor:   1.279


  3 in total

1.  Thoughts of creation and the discipline of nursing.

Authors:  Margareth Kristoffersen
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2019-02-06

2.  Connecting patients, practitioners, and regulators in supporting positive experiences and processes of shared decision making: A progress report.

Authors:  Fiona Browne; Steven Bettles; Stacey Clift; Tim Walker
Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract       Date:  2019-10-09       Impact factor: 2.431

3.  Integrity at end of life in the intensive care unit: a qualitative study of nurses' views.

Authors:  Lena Palmryd; Åsa Rejnö; Tove E Godskesen
Journal:  Ann Intensive Care       Date:  2021-02-05       Impact factor: 6.925

  3 in total

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