Encompassing multiple moral paradigms: A challenge for nursing educators
Keywords
Morally conflicting situationsNursing ethics
Judeo/Christian tradition
Challenges
Chinese ethical philosophies
130209 Medicine, Nursing and Health Curriculum and Pedagogy
Non- European nursing students
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http://hdl.handle.net/10652/1663Abstract
Providing ethically competent care requires nurses to reflect not only on nursing ethics, but also on their own ethical traditions. New challenges for nurse educators over the last decade have been the increasing globalization of the nursing workforce and the internationalization of nursing education. In New Zealand, there has been a large increase in numbers of Chinese students, both international and immigrant, already acculturated with ethical and cultural values derived from Chinese Confucian moral traditions. Recently, several incidents involving Chinese nursing students in morally conflicting situations have led to one nursing faculty reflecting upon how moral philosophy is taught to non-European students and the support given to Chinese students in integrating the taught curriculum into real-life clinical practice settings. This article uses a case study involving a Chinese student to reflect on the challenges for both faculty members and students when encountering situations that present ethical dilemmas.Date
2010-03Type
Journal ArticleIdentifier
oai:unitec.researchbank.ac.nz:10652/1663http://hdl.handle.net/10652/1663
0969-7330
Caldwell, E., Hongyan, L., & Harding, T. (2010). Encompassing multiple moral paradigms: A challenge for nursing educators. Nursing Ethics, 17(2), 189-199. doi: 10.1177/0969733009355539
10.1177/0969733009355539