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- Factors associated with Nurses¡¯ Moral Sensitivity
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- Moral development; Morals; Empathy; Communication; Nurses
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- 27±Ç 3È£ pp. 199-207
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- Purpose: The purposes of this study were to examine the associations among moral reasoning, empathy, communication
self-efficacy, and moral sensitivity and to determine predictors of nurses¡¯ moral sensitivity. Methods: Data were
collected from 194 nurses in the Republic of Korea. Structured questionnaires consisted of the Moral Sensitivity
Questionnaire, Defining Issues Test, Jefferson Scale of Empathy, and Counseling Self-Estimate Inventory. The
collected data were analyzed using t-tests, one-way ANOVA, Pearson¡¯s correlation coefficient, and hierarchical
regression analysis using SPSS ver. 21. Results: Nurses¡¯ moral sensitivities were significantly associated with
frequency of ethical education, empathy, and communication self-efficacy. In hierarchical multiple regression
models, the significant factors of nurses¡¯ moral sensitivity were age (¥â=.21, p=.044), the frequency of experience
in ethics education (¥â=.18, p=.007), empathy (¥â=.32, p<.001), and communication self-efficacy (¥â=.25, p=.001),
which explained 33.2% of the variance in nurses¡¯ moral sensitivity. Conclusion: Our study findings show that nurses¡¯
moral sensitivity could be enhanced by more frequent ethics education programs. In addition, nursing ethics education
might be developed to include potential strategies to improve empathy and self-efficacy in communication for
high levels of moral sensitivity in nurses.
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27-3-199-±è¼®¼±-ÃÖÁ¾.pdf
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