Navigating Ethical Tensions When Working to Address Social Inequities

Author:

McArdle Hannah1ORCID,Barlott Tim2,McBryde Cathy3,Shevellar Lynda4,Branjerdporn Nataya5

Affiliation:

1. Hannah McArdle, BOccThy, is Occupational Therapist, Metro South Hospital and Health Service, Department of Health, Woolloongabba, Queensland, Australia; hannah.mcardle@uq.net.au

2. Tim Barlott, PhD, is Assistant Professor, Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

3. Cathy McBryde, PhD, is Lecturer, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia.

4. Lynda Shevellar, PhD, is Senior Lecturer, School of Social Science, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia.

5. Nataya Branjerdporn, BOccThy, is PhD Candidate, School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland, Australia.

Abstract

AbstractImportance: When providing services, occupational therapists encounter social inequities that affect the health and well-being of their clients and create ethical tensions.Objective: To develop an understanding of the ethical tensions encountered by occupational therapists working with clients experiencing social inequity and how such tensions are navigated.Design: This qualitative study used an interpretive description methodology.Setting: Community and tertiary health settings.Participants: Fifteen occupational therapists who identified as working with clients experiencing social inequity.Outcomes and Measures: Semistructured interviews were used to explore participants’ practice experiences. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis.Results: Two themes were identified in relation to participants’ experiences of ethical tensions: (a) perpetuating inequities and (b) experiencing conflicting values. A further three themes were identified in relation to how participants identified and navigated these tensions: (a) taking action, (b) seeking support, and (c) ensuring integrity and accountability.Conclusions and Relevance: Ethical tensions frequently emerged when systemic health contexts were not responsive to social inequities or created barriers to health care access. Occupational therapists felt a sense of responsibility to take action to address inequity, which led them to stretch boundaries and roles. Having informal and formal supports, and confidence in the scope of their practice, helped the occupational therapists to navigate ethical tensions with integrity and accountability. Increased avenues for support that incorporate reflexivity offer an opportunity for occupational therapists to engage in dialogue about social inequities and ethical practice.What This Article Adds: This article explores the types of ethical tensions occupational therapists experience when addressing social inequities and provides insights into how such tensions are managed.

Publisher

AOTA Press

Subject

Occupational Therapy

Reference31 articles.

1. Occupational therapists as street-level bureaucrats: Leveraging the political nature of everyday practice;Aldrich;Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy,2020

2. Inequalities in health: Definitions, concepts, and theories;Arcaya;Global Health Action,2015

3. The complexities of power in feminist multicultural psychotherapy supervision;Arczynski;Journal of Counseling Psychology,2017

4. Doing occupational justice: A central dimension of everyday occupational therapy practice;Bailliard;Canadian Journal of Occupational Therapy,2020

5. Using thematic analysis in psychology;Braun;Qualitative Research in Psychology,2006

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