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Caring for older patients with reduced decision-making capacity: a deductive exploratory study of ambulance clinicians' ethical competence.

Bodil HolmbergAnna BennesvedAnders Bremer
Published in: BMC medical ethics (2023)
Ambulance clinicians fail to see their gut feeling as a professional ethical competence, which might hinder them from reacting to unethical ways of working. Further, they lack ethical reflection regarding the benefits and disadvantages of paternalism, which reduces their ability to perform ethical decision-making. Moreover, their ethical knowledge is hampered by an ageist approach to older patients, which also has consequences for their ethical action. Finally, ambulance clinicians show deficiencies regarding their ethical reflections, as they reflect merely on their own actions, rather than on their values.
Keyphrases
  • decision making
  • palliative care