Political action in nursing and medical codes of ethics

Author:

Essex Ryan1ORCID,Mainey Lydia2ORCID,Dillard‐Wright Jess3ORCID,Richardson Sarah4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Lifecourse Development University of Greenwich London UK

2. School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Sciences Central Queensland University Cairns Australia

3. Elaine Marieb College of Nursing University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst Massachusetts USA

4. School of Health and Social Care University of Essex Colchester UK

Abstract

AbstractPolitical action has a long history in the health workforce. There are multiple historical examples, from civil disobedience to marches and even sabotage that can be attributed to health workers. Such actions remain a feature of the healthcare community to this day; their status with professional and regulatory bodies is far less clear, however. This has created uncertainty for those undertaking such action, particularly those who are engaged in what could be termed ‘contentious’ forms of action. This study explored how advocacy and activism were presented in nursing and medical codes of ethics, comparing disciplinary and temporo‐spatial differences to understand how such action may be promoted or constrained by codes. The data for this study comes from 217 codes of ethics. Because of the size of the corpus and to facilitate analysis, natural language processing was utilised, which allowed for an automated exploration of the data and for comparisons to be drawn between groups. This was complemented by a manual search and contextualisation of the data. While there were noticeable differences between medical and nursing codes, overall, advocacy, activism and even politics were rarely discussed explicitly in most codes. When such action was spoken about, this was often vague and imprecise with codes speaking of ‘political action’ and ‘advocacy’ in general terms. While some codes were far more forthright in what they meant about advocacy or broader political action (i.e., Nursing codes in Denmark, Norway, Canada) more forceful language that spoke in specific terms or in terms of oppositional or specific actions (e.g., civil disobedience or marches) was almost completely avoided. These results are discussed in relation to the broader literature on codes and the normative questions they raise, namely whether such action should be included in codes of ethics at all.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference38 articles.

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5. Ethics codes and use of new and innovative drugs

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