4.2 Article

Pharmacy ethical reasoning: a comparison of Australian pharmacists and interns

期刊

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACY
卷 41, 期 4, 页码 1085-1098

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11096-019-00815-5

关键词

Australia; Decision making; Ethics; Interns; Moral development; Pharmacists

资金

  1. Quality Use of Medicines Network, School of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, Griffith University
  2. School of Pharmacy, Curtin University, Western Australia

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Background Ethical reasoning informs decision making and professional judgement, is guided by codes of ethics and conduct, and requires navigation through a regulatory framework. Ethical reasoning should evolve throughout the pharmacy internship year and prepare interns for independent practice. Objective To explore the ethical reasoning and processes of Australian pharmacists and pharmacy interns. Setting Queensland community pharmacists and interns. Method A survey to determine use of resources to guide ethical decisions, management of ethical dilemmas, and exposure to potential practice privacy breaches. Participants were recruited at pharmacy intern training events, a pharmacist education session and through telephone contact of randomised community pharmacies. Main outcome measure Comparison between pharmacist and intern responses using 5-point Likert scales, listings and prioritising. Results In total 218 completed surveys were analysed: 121 pharmacy interns and 97 pharmacists. The Code of Ethics was identified as the resource most frequently consulted when faced with ethical dilemmas. Interns were more likely to consult legislation and regulatory authorities whereas pharmacists with colleagues. Responses to ethical vignette scenarios and exposure to privacy breaches varied between interns and pharmacists, with some scenarios revealing significant differences. Most participants had been exposed to a variety of potential privacy breaches in practice. Conclusion Interns focussed on legislation and guidelines when presented with hypothetical ethical dilemmas. In contrast to this positivist approach, pharmacists reported using a social constructionist approach with peers as a reference. Pharmacists avoided ethical scenario options that required complex management. Interns reported more exposure to potential practice privacy breaches.

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