Ethical problems in pediatrics: what does the setting of care and education show us?
BMC Medical Ethics 2012, 13:2 doi:10.1186/1472-6939-13-2Published: 16 March 2012
Abstract (provisional)
Background
Pediatrics ethics education should enhance medical students' skills to deal with ethical    problems that may arise in the different settings of care. This study aimed to analyze    the ethical problems experienced by physicians who have medical education and pediatric    care responsibilities, and if those problems are associated to their workplace, medical    specialty and area of clinical practice. 
Methods
A self-applied semi-structured questionnaire was answered by 88 physicians with teaching    and pediatric care responsibilities. Content analysis was performed to analyze the    qualitative data. Poisson regression was used to explore the association of the categories    of ethical problems reported with workplace and professional specialty and activity. 
Results
210 ethical problems were reported, grouped into five areas: physician-patient relationship,    end-of-life care, health professional conducts, socioeconomic issues and health policies,    and pediatric teaching. Doctors who worked in hospitals as well as general and subspecialist    pediatricians reported fewer ethical problems related to socioeconomic issues and    health policies than those who worked in Basic Health Units and who were family doctors. 
Conclusions
Some ethical problems are specific to certain settings: those related to end-of-life    care are more frequent in the hospital settings and those associated with socioeconomic    issues and public health policies are more frequent in Basic Health Units. Other problems    are present in all the setting of pediatric care and learning and include ethical    problems related to physician-patient relationship, health professional conducts and    the pediatric education process. These findings should be taken into consideration    when planning the teaching of ethics in pediatrics. Trial registration This research    article didn't reports the results of a controlled health care intervention. The study    project was approved by the Institutional Ethical Review Committee (Report CEP-HIJG    032/2008). 
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