Showing 16 results for Hosseini
Majid Hassanpoor, Mohammadali Hosseini, Massod Fallahi Khoshknab, Abbas Abbaszadeh,
Volume 4, Issue 5 (10-2011)
Abstract
Making decisions for recipients of health care while offering clinical care is an important part of nurses’ responsibilities. In order to ensure patient satisfaction, nurses are obligated to observe ethical standards in the decision-making process. This paper aimed to determine the effect of teaching professional ethical principles on ethical sensitivity in nurses’ decision-making.
In this semi-empirical study, 80 Social Security nurses were selected through purposive sampling and were then randomly placed in two groups of 40 each, the intervention group and the control group. Research tool was the Ethical Sensitivity Scale Questionnaire for decision-making, the validity of which was assessed using content validity, and whose reliability was confirmed with a Cronbach’s alpha coefficient of 0.83 for internal consistency. At first the ethical sensitivity in decision-making was evaluated in both groups, and then an educational workshop on nursing ethics was held for the intervention group every other week the workshop consisted of 4 three-hour sessions, and upon completion of this workshop, both groups filled in the questionnaire once more, and data were analyzed using SPSS software.
There was no significant difference between the average ethical sensitivity in decision-making of the two groups before the intervention after the intervention, however, the difference was meaningful (P = 0.001). Moreover, the average ethical sensitivity in decision-making of the intervention group was significantly different after the intervention (P = 0.001).
Based on the findings of this study, teaching nursing ethical principles has a positive effect on nurses’ ethical sensitivity in decision-making. It is therefore recommended that this educational program be offered to nursing students and health care staff.
Amir Ashkan Nasiripour, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, Hasan Fazayeli Rad, Abbas Kamyabi,
Volume 4, Issue 6 (12-2011)
Abstract
Evaluation of the factors related to the patients&apos complaints against medical staff, especially doctors and efforts towards its reduction affects patients&apos satisfaction of health care system. The main purpose of the present study was to determine the factors related to the patient`s complaint against doctors with the verdict of Medical Council of Kerman.
This study was a descriptive, analytical and practical evaluation, assessing 250 documents related to the patients&apos complaints of doctors in Kerman Medical Council during 2004-2009.
The most reasons of complaints (%73.2) were carelessness and disrespecting scientific and legal standards, and obtaining funds out of legal standards (%9.3) respectively. In the case of issuing vote, the most opinions (%31.7) were innocence and suspended and barred from prosecuting (%22.9) respectively. Most complaints were of ophthalmologists and private hospitals. There were significant relationship between the reason of complaint and issued out (P<0.01, c2= 53.706) and the reason of complaints and field practitioners (P=0.026, c2= 49.27). No significant relationship between issued out and the type of hospital was found.
Regarding the results, respecting scientific, and legal standards, and decreasing financial relationships between doctors and patients is an effective way in reducing patients&apos complaints of physicians. Improvement in physicians&apos patients&apos relationship by explaining the disease condition, its risks and treatment options to patients are effective in reducing patient&aposs complaint against physicians.
Akram Sadat Sadat Hosseini, Zohreh Vanaki,
Volume 5, Issue 1 (12-2011)
Abstract
Nurses face to a lot of different gender perspectives in their routine work. Cultural and social backgrounds influence gender stereotyping and it causes significant changes in nursing roles. This article reviews and analyzes the effect of gender on nursing. Gender perspective in nursing has affected services and quality of nursing practices. Although gender perspective affects health care system, its elimination is not beneficial. Because its elimination abducts nursing from its real spirit and disappoint women from exposing their emotional and mental abilities. Therefore gender stereotyping affects nursing from different dimensions and it will improve nursing profession by leading right way.
Akram Alsadat Sadat Hosseini,
Volume 5, Issue 4 (1 2012)
Abstract
Pediatric research is a complicated and sensitive field of research that involves specific legal, ethical, and even philosophical aspects therefore the guideline of pediatric research is considered one of the important ethical guidelines in research. Although this ethical guideline has been used for some years, a need for its revision is always felt with the passing of time. Accordingly this study was carried out through library search, aiming to present a critical ethical review of the national guidelines for pediatric research. One important ethical issue is obtaining informed consent from children of various age groups, and the performance of the ethical committee in case of conflict between the child and his parent(s) or guardian. Recent studies show that getting informed consent needs to be revised and a new guideline must be developed for each age group. Another important issue is the unlawfulness of monetary incentives in pediatric research, which is nowadays being questioned. Among the topics discussed in ethical codes is the beneficence and non maleficence of the research for children, while the ruling philosophy in pediatric research has posed great challenges in the process. This has caused some research to lack quality and researchers are reluctant to do pediatric research. In terms of information dissemination and confidentiality, there seems to be a lot of debate regarding the child's age, and therefore these issues should be taken into account for revision. Hence we propose that in order to improve the quality of research, the present ethical guideline be revised and based on past experiences, legal and ethics professionals as well as philosophers and lecturers be involved in the process.
Mrs Mina Hosseini,
Volume 9, Issue 1 (5-2016)
Abstract
The pharmaceutical industry plays an important role in every economy. Although pharmaceutical sector has distinctive economic features, like every other sector of the economy, the production and distribution of pharmaceuticals must obey competition law rules.
The provisions regarding unilateral anticompetitive conduct such as discriminatory pricing, aggressive price setting, abusing a dominate position and hoarding and refusal to inter into transactions as well as collective anticompetitive conducts such as collusion are some important competition rules which are applicable in the pharmaceutical industry.
Although the existence of competition law and regulation is necessary for working in pharmaceutical industry but pharmaceutical ethics can prevent committing the anticompetitive conducts and plays an effective role as a deterrent factor. This Article while reviewing the application of competition law rules in pharmaceutical industry introduces the anticompetitive behaviors in this sector.We also focus on the competition council’s function in monitoring the pharmaceutical industry and the role of professional ethics in preventing theviolation of competition law in this sector.
Mansoureh Ashghali Farahani, Tahmine Salehi, Zahra Arab Ameri, Fatemeh Hajibabaee, Agha Fatemeh Hosseini, Fatemeh Ghaffari,
Volume 9, Issue 4 (10-2016)
Abstract
Empathy is a necessary condition for an effective nursing care. An empathetic relationship between nurse and patients leads to positive treatment outcomes and moral sensitivity among students in clinical and educational environments. This study was conducted in 2014 to determine the level of empathy among nursing students and its relationship with their demographic data. A cross-sectional study (Descriptive analysis) was undertaken using paper-based versions of the Jefferson Scale of nursing Empathy. By using stratified random sampling, 320 undergraduate students from the first to forth-year of their program in Tehran University of Medical Sciences were selected.
The result shows that participants reported good empathy levels, and the average of empathy score was 103 ±11. Empathy scores increased with increasing academic year. There was a significant relationship between sex and empathy. Students who did not passed the effective communication course scored higher than their counterparts. Empathy score increased with age, and older students recorded higher scores than their younger colleagues. Single and employed students recorded higher empathy scores than married and unemployed students.
There were no significant differences between the place of living (dormitory versus personal house), Interest in nursing education as well as their marks.
Regarding the relationship between empathy with students’ academic years, the finding offers insights into the importance of incorporating and promoting empathy in nursing curricula from the first year of training.
In addition, it is necessary to pay more attention to teaching empathy to male students.
Seyed Abdarahim Hosseini, Mohamad J. Sadeghpour, Naghi Aghazadeh,
Volume 9, Issue 5 (1-2017)
Abstract
Since the beginning of the Imamia school of thought, Imamia scholars paid a great attention to issue of physicians’ responsibility. With a long-lasting debate on this issue, in most cases they have confirmed physician’s responsibility in medical error. However, in terms of a skilled medical doctor who treats the patient with no medical error but harm occurs, there is no consensus. Some scholars have said that if the physician had the patient’s (or family) consent for the treatment, then the physician is not guilty. In the contrary, some scholars believe that the physician still should bear the responsibility.This paper aims to examine the Islamic Pinal Code (no. 495) by relying on changing trajectory Imamia jurisprudence in exchange for claimed physicians’ responsibility. The legislators in Article 495 of the Islamic Penal Code (Act. 92), seems to take into account both mentioned perspectives and try to choose a middle way. However, in practice, this has caused confusion.
Fariba Soheili, Azadeh Taheri, Simin Hosseinian, Roghieh Nooripour,
Volume 12, Issue 0 (3-2019)
Abstract
In this research, an intercultural comparison between medical students from Iran and England was made to investigate the potential impact of culture on empathy and the relationships between empathy and child birth order in the family. The population consisted of medical students of medical universities from three cities: Tehran (Iran), London and Sheffield (England). The sample consisted of 182 students from two countries (88 Iranian, 94 English) which was selected by convenience sampling method. Data was collected by scale of empathy- student version and researcher made demographic questionnaire. Data was analyzed by using student’s t- test, MANOVA and Scheffe post hoc test. Results showed that the physician empathy of Iranian medical students is significantly higher than English students (P <0.01). Also the results showed that birth order of students has a meaningful correlation with their empathy (F=2.96,P<0.05). The results of multivariate analysis of variance showed that in the empathy variable, empathic care and self-care is more than English students rather than the patient of Iranian students, but they do not differ in the component of adopting the view. The result of this study reveals the importance of cultural differences and family factors such as birth order on personality factors for instance the physician ability to empathize with patients.
Mina Hosseini, Hanieh Akbari,
Volume 12, Issue 0 (3-2019)
Abstract
Nowadays, social networks play a remarkable role in human societies. Instagram, as one of the most influential platforms, along with other functions, has become a place for the marketing and advertising of economic undertakings. Advertisements on Instagram are different from other forms of advertising. The market-driven nature of this network will create many legal challenges in the relationship between professions and consumers. Goods (such as medicines and herbal medicines) and health services (such as medicine, dentistry, and pharmacy) are related to the health of consumers. It is evident that any negligence on the part of the profession can cause serious harm to consumer’s physical and mental health. This article assesses the evolution of the relationship between the professional and the consumers. It discusses the ethics of Instagram marketing and health problem, along with reviewing the legal protection of consumer’s health in the -related goods and services using an analytical-descriptive method. The results of this paper show that violating consumer rights on Instagram can lead to four types of liability (criminal, legal, disciplinary, and ethical) for the offenders. In this way, the support of the legislator and the responsible authorities is essential for increasing the quality of this protection.
Seyyed Abdol Rahim Hosseini, Davoud Zareian,
Volume 13, Issue 0 (3-2020)
Abstract
Perhaps, the most appropriate translation proposed for euthanasia is the painless and piteous killing. According to the existence of effective components in committing a crime, it is considered as complicity in murder and the consent of victim does not affect the nature of criminal act and the criminal liability of person depriving the life. One of issues related to this killing which is disagreed is the edict that person who is obliged to save life related to passive type of euthanasia does not perform this killing and there must be difference among its different types and conditions. The primary reasoning of the edicts indicate that duties whether difficulty or not must be done but, according to the rule of negation of difficulty and hardship, obligation to these edicts in cases of hardship is cancelled. The articles of this rule include obligatory duties to disuse. However, from the view of jurists, it is not general that euthanasia corresponds to some juridical sub-principles indicating the permission of suicide in some conditions, although this is criticized and rejected. Two rules of hardship and beneficence are those believed to help prove the hypothesis by attaching to the rule of negation of hardship and difficulty. But, it is clear that it is not so. In feasibility study of this rule with the rule of no harm, they are proved by the murder illegality and the mentioned rules cannot govern the primary reasoning of depriving the life Therefore, euthanasia is not allowed at all.
Maasoumeh Mangeli, Zahra Rezahosseini, Hossein Sabzaliani,
Volume 15, Issue 1 (3-2022)
Abstract
Providing nursing care based on ethical values requires nurses to have ethical sensitivity. Determining the factors related to moral sensitivity can help to identify strategies to promote this ability. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between nurses' ethical sensitivity and work environment index. This descriptive-correlational study was performed in the presence of 135 nurses of Vali-e-Asr Hospital in Shahr-e-Babak (Kerman province) in 2021. Samples were selected by consensus method. Lutzen Ethical Sensitivity Questionnaire and Work Environment Index Questionnaire were used to data collection. Data analysis was performed by determining the Pearson correlation coefficient and regression test using SPSS26. T-test and ANOVA were also used to examine the difference in mean scores based on demographic and occupational variables. Findings showed that the status of ethical sensitivity and work environment index of nurses participating in this study is at a moderate level and there is a significant correlation between nurses' ethical sensitivity and work environment index (P=0/049 R=0/212). Also, the mean score of work environment index showed a significant difference based on the variables of position (P=0/008) and shift work (P = 0/012). The existence of a significant relationship between nurses' ethical sensitivity and their work environment index confirms the importance of the work environment and its related consequences. According to the results of the present study, by optimizing the working environment of nurses, we can expect their ethical sensitivity to improve.
Zahr Kheiri, Toktam Masoumian Hosseini, Ataollah Pourabbasi,
Volume 16, Issue 0 (ویژه نامه کاربست طرح های دو گروه اخلاق و آموزش پزشکی 2023)
Abstract
Entrepreneurship and the creation of knowledge-based wealth during the past years are considerable issues in scientific and executive institutions, including health institutions. the present study aimed to design course topics to empower medical professionals to have an effective role in the innovation, technology, and knowledge-based ecosystem. This study was conducted using the scoping review method. After determining the research questions, a wide range of studies were investigated systematically and then a snowball search was performed to identify more relevant studies. In the next step, the most relevant data were extracted and then categorized and arranged according to the needs, and finally, the results were summarized as descriptive and inferential statistics tables. The data were coded and analyzed in pairs. Ultimately, the areas and course topics of the entrepreneurship curriculum were extracted and arranged as a suggested list. Then, the expert panel method was used to agree on the course topics and develop educational goals. In this study, 52 essential competencies were identified for medical professionals to have an effective role in the innovation, technology, and knowledge-based ecosystem. These competencies were categorized as 17 course topics and 3 categories including motivation, entrepreneurial knowledge and skills, and business knowledge and skills. Providing the necessary training to develop a comprehensive view of the opportunities and needs in society as well as the knowledge-based business environment is one of the basic concepts that should be included alongside entrepreneurship and business.
Arman Latifi, Seyyed Sadegh Hosseini, Sara Rahimi, Vahid Rahmani, Atefeh Esfandiari, Hedayat Salari,
Volume 16, Issue 1 (3-2023)
Abstract
Professional commitment is described as a set of attitudes, values, behaviors, and relationships that serve as the foundation of a health professional's contract with society. The present study was conducted with the aim of determining the attitude of medical students of Bushehr University of Medical Sciences towards professional commitment in 2022. The research population of this descriptive study included 254 students of the last 3 years of the Faculty of Medicine of Bushehr University of Medical Sciences who were included in the study by census. The standard questionnaire of attitude towards the professional commitment of doctors was used for data gathering. Data were analyzed using SPSS software version 25. Descriptive tests, Spearman's correlation test, linear regression and Mann-Whitney test were used to analyze the data. The mean and standard deviation of the age of the students participating in the study was 24.69±2.25 years. The mean and standard deviation of the attitude score towards professional commitment were 67.12±12.72 out of 100. There was a statistically significant relationship between the variables of age, academic semester and experience of participating in training courses related to professional ethics with the mean attitude score (p < 0.05), but there was no relationship between gender and the attitude score towards professional commitment. There was no statistical significance (p > 0.05). Educational centers and its professors, as the most influential force on the formation of students' morals, should revise and implement the educational program well in the field of medical professionalism, considering professional needs
Mohaddeseh Mohsenpour, Amir Zoka, Fahimeh Amani, Elham Charoghchian Khorasani, Seyyed Javad Hosseini,
Volume 17, Issue 0 (Supplement of 11th Annual Iranian Congress of Medical Ethics 2024)
Abstract
Societies that fail to adequately address the growing needs of the elderly and the consequences of aging will face significant challenges. A critical challenge in many countries involves ensuring the provision of accessible and affordable healthcare services for the elderly. The active engagement of older adults in seeking healthcare services and adhering to preventive care measures is crucial for reducing healthcare costs. This study aimed to elucidate the lived experiences of elderly individuals regarding the factors influencing their utilization of primary healthcare services in Mashhad, Iran. This qualitative study employed content analysis. Participants were recruited through snowball sampling from a list of elderly individuals registered with health centers in Mashhad, including those who regularly utilized services and those who had not visited in the past two years. Eighteen elderly individuals participated in the study. Data were collected through in-depth interviews using open-ended questions and subsequent probing. Interview transcripts were analyzed using Bernard's formal content analysis approach. A significant barrier to accessing healthcare services identified by elderly participants was a lack of dignity during their visits to health centers. This theme encompassed two subcategories: perceived dignity violation and observed dignity violation. The imposition of feelings of worthlessness on the elderly was recognized as a prevalent cultural issue within society. Factors contributing to a diminished sense of dignity included: inadequate physical space to accommodate the limitations of the elderly, informal and unprofessional behavior of healthcare providers, excessive waiting times, unsanitary and overcrowded health centers, a lack of appointment scheduling, disruptions in internet and software systems that prolonged the healthcare process, shared waiting spaces with infants and young people, and insufficient seating. Participants emphasized the detrimental impact of a lack of dignity in healthcare settings, expressing feelings of worthlessness. These findings corroborate those of previous studies highlighting the paramount importance of dignity in healthcare environments. The perception among elderly individuals that healthcare services prioritize administrative processes over patient-centered care may discourage them from seeking preventive services. This study underscores the critical need for a cultural shift within healthcare systems to prioritize the dignity and respect of elderly patients and foster a supportive environment that encourages preventive care.
Sooreh Khaki, Masoud Fallahi -Khoshknab, Farahnaz Mohammadi-Shahboulaghi, Gülbeyaz Can, Mohammad Ali Hosseini,
Volume 17, Issue 1 (3-2024)
Abstract
Conveying bad news to patients and their families is a process that requires team collaboration. Different countries have taken into consideration providing suitable solutions. This study aimed to develop an practical guideline, according to the experiences of patients, families, and healthcare providers in intensive care units across three phases. In the first phase, in-depth interviews were conducted with 31 participants selected through purposive sampling, and the initial draft of the practical guideline was created. In the second phase, the initial draft was discussed and reviewed by experts in two focus group meetings, and a secondary draft was developed. In the third phase, the practical guideline compiled by the Delphi method was validated by 43 experts in policymaking and decision-making. Finally, an practical guideline to deliver bad news to patients and their families was developed with 8 main steps and 43 sub-steps. The main steps included before delivering bad news (assessment, planning and preparation, coordination), during delivering bad news (announcing bad news, emotional support, summary and documentation), and after delivering bad news (referral, follow-up). This practical guideline is intended to facilitate the process of delivering bad news in intensive care units to achieve the desired outcomes and reduce the resulting consequences and harms. Accordingly, healthcare providers are recommended to consider the importance of patient and family preferences, adhering to scientific and standard methods for delivering bad news, and upholding the principles of professional ethics.
Sayyed Mohammad Taghi Hosseini Vardaniani, Dr Ahmad Salami, Sayyed Morteza Hosseini, Jannat Mashayekhi,
Volume 18, Issue 1 (3-2025)
Abstract
The vegetative state is a condition in contemporary medicine that raises numerous ethical, jurisprudential, and legal challenges. The most fundamental question when confronting this condition concerns whether individuals in such a state are considered alive or deceased, as subsequent rulings and implications are typically contingent upon the answer to this question. Some contemporary Islamic jurists, drawing upon the jurisprudential division of life into “stable life” and “unstable life”, have deemed individuals in a vegetative state to be deceased, given their lack of volition and consciousness. This study argues that the concept of “unstable life” does not apply to these individuals, particularly in cases of persistent and chronic vegetative states where the possibility of regaining consciousness, however remote, exists. Furthermore, the continued function of the brainstem and the non-fulfillment of the medical and legal criteria for brain death in many systems affirm that the designation of “deceased” is incorrect. From an Islamic perspective, the definitive separation of the soul from the body, which is the condition for the occurrence of death, cannot be ascertained in the vegetative state. Ultimately, in circumstances of doubt regarding the life or death of a person in a vegetative state, this uncertainty constitutes a “case-specific doubt”, and by applying the legal principle of “presumption of continued life”, the individual must be deemed alive and all the corresponding legal and religious consequences of life must be accorded to them.