학술논문

Use of ethical predictability in respect for human rights in Iranian hospitals with a 360-degree approach
Document Type
JOURNAL
Source
International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare, 2020, Vol. 13, Issue 5, pp. 445-455.
Subject
research-article
Research paper
cat-HSC
Health & social care
cat-VG
Vulnerable groups
cat-IDMG
Inequalities & diverse/minority groups
Ethical predictability
Organizational ethics
Human rights
Hospital
Language
English
ISSN
2056-4902
Abstract
Purpose Respect for human rights is one of the most important criteria for the delivery of medical care in hospitals. Ethical predictability is useful to identify human rights concerns in health-care organizations. The hospital environment and the flow of its processes make the topic of predictability much more sensitive and, at the same time, more difficult than other organizations. The purpose of this paper is to determine and compare the ethical predictive factors in selected hospitals in Mazandaran province. Design/methodology/approach This cross-sectional survey using multilevel sampling (four hospitals, 938 patients, 186 staff) was conducted in the first half of 2017. The measurement instrument was a researcher-made questionnaire consisting of seven areas of service recipients’ rights, patient safety, patient satisfaction, human resources, governance, organizational and financial commitments. The analysis of the collected data was performed through SPSS V. 22 and one-way ANOVA and post hoc Tukey’s tests. Findings Ethical predictability was higher in social security hospitals compared to private and public hospitals, and patient safety and patient rights showed higher magnitudes compared to other dimensions. Financial domain, patient satisfaction, governance and organizational commitment formed the middle priorities in ethical predictability, and human resources had the least average in ethical predictability in the selected hospitals in the province. Originality/value Identifying the factors which influence ethical predictability, in addition to promoting service recipients’ rights and patient satisfaction, is of great help to the managers and health service authorities, so that they can have a better understanding of these factors and, consequently, make appropriate micro and macro-decisions to provide better services.