Literature DB >> 21436671

Developing personal values: trainees' attitudes toward strikes by health care providers.

Su-Ting T Li1, Malathi Srinivasan, Claudia Der-Martirosian, Richard L Kravitz, Michael S Wilkes.   

Abstract

Worldwide, health care providers use strikes and job actions to influence policy. For health care providers, especially physicians, strikes create an ethical tension between an obligation to care for current patients (e.g., to provide care and avoid abandonment) and an obligation to better care for future patients by seeking system improvements (e.g., improvements in safety, to access, and in the composition and strength of the health care workforce). This tension is further intensified when the potential benefit of a strike involves professional self-interest and the potential risk involves patient harm or death. By definition, trainees are still forming their professional identities and values, including their opinions on fair wages, health policy, employee benefits, professionalism, and strikes. In this article, the authors explore these ethical tensions, beginning with a discussion of reactions to a potential 2005 nursing strike at the University of California, Davis, Medical Center. The authors then propose a conceptual model describing factors that may influence health care providers' decisions to strike (including personal ethics, personal agency, and strike-related context). In particular, the authors explore the relationship between training level and attitudes toward taking a job action, such as going on strike. Because trainees' attitudes toward strikes continue to evolve during training, the authors maintain that open discussion around the ethics of health care professionals' strikes and other methods of conflict resolution should be included in medical education to enhance professionalism and systems-based practice training. The authors include sample case vignettes to help initiate these important discussions.
Copyright © by the Association of American medical Colleges.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21436671     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e318212b551

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  1 in total

1.  Global medicine: is it ethical or morally justifiable for doctors and other healthcare workers to go on strike?

Authors:  Sylvester C Chima
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2013-12-19       Impact factor: 2.652

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.