Author:
Raesi Rasoul,Saghari Sam,Tabatabaee Seyed Saeed,Mirzaei Sepideh,Hushmandi Kiavash
Abstract
Background:
This study aimed to determine the current status of respect for the human dignity of mothers and newborn from the perspective of women who have given birth.
Providing health services with respect for the human dignity of the mother and the newborn can boost the mother's self-esteem, encourage her to become pregnant in the future, and may also strengthen her confidence in the medical system.
Methods:
A cross-sectional study was carried out through a census of 384 women who gave birth in Khaf's 22nd Bahman Hospital, eastern Iran, in 2022. A researcher-developed questionnaire was used to collect data, which were then analyzed in SPSS-22 using one-sample t and multiple linear regression. The significance level was established at p <0.05.
Results:
Communication with respect (2.98 ± 0.53) and respect for individual autonomy (2.94 ± 0.54) ranked highest and lowest, respectively, among the components of respect for the mother and newborn's human dignity. From the perspective of women who had given birth, respect for the human dignity of the mother and newborn in general, as well as the components of respect for personal privacy and communication with respect, were at a moderate level, whereas respect for individual autonomy was below average.
Conclusion:
The below-average score of the component of respect for individual autonomy and, finally the average level of respect for the human dignity of the mother and newborn necessitates that managers prioritize promoting these concepts in the provision of health services through practical programs.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Community and Home Care,Health (social science)
Reference43 articles.
1. Cronqvist A, Theorell T, Burns T, Lützén K.
Caring about - caring for: Moral obligations and work responsibilities in intensive care nursing.
Nurs Ethics
2004;
11
(1)
: 63-76.
2. Matiti MR, Trorey GM.
Patients’ expectations of the maintenance of their dignity.
J Clin Nurs
2008;
17
(20)
: 2709-17.
3. Borhani F, Alhani F, Mohammadi E, Abbaszadeh A.
Professional ethical competence in nursing: The role of nursing instructors.
J Med Ethics Hist Med
2010;
3
: 3.
4. Lin YP, Tsai YF, Chen HF.
Dignity in care in the hospital setting from patients’ perspectives in Taiwan: a descriptive qualitative study.
J Clin Nurs
2011;
20
(5-6)
: 794-801.
5. Jackson A, Irwin W.
Dignity, humanity and equality: Principle of nursing practice A.
Nurs Stand
2011;
25
(28)
: 35-7.