Analyzing Ethical Conflict in the Transracial Adoption Debate: Three Conflicts Involving Community

Hypatia ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet Farrell Smith

This essay explores ethical conflicts underlying the discourse of the policy debate about transracial adoption, focusing on the adoption of Black children by whites. Three underlying conflicts are analyzed, namely, the values of equality versus community, interracial community versus mukiculturalism, individuality versus racial-ethnic community. The essay concludes with observations on multicultural families.

1982 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 703-714 ◽  
Author(s):  
James K. Morrison ◽  
Bruce D. Layton ◽  
Joan Newman

In a small geographical area a study was undertaken to determine the ethical conflicts experienced by mental health workers related to their clinical interventions. An Ethical Conflict Questionnaire, a 20-item, self-report attitude measure, was sent to all mental health workers in a tri-city area. A multivariate analysis of variance of the 164 returned questionnaires indicated that sex, years of clinical experience, and occupation (psychologist, psychiatrist, psychiatric social worker, psychiatric nurse, and a combined group of mostly vocational rehabilitation counselors and mental health therapy aides) significantly affect reported ethical conflict.


2021 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-328
Author(s):  
Jiazhi Fengjiang

This article explores the "ethical labour" of suspension––the conscious effort of deferring one's ethical judgement and reflections in order to avoid irreconcilable ethical conflicts between one's present activities and long-term goals. While people engage in ethical judgement and reflections in everyday social interactions, it is the laborious aspect of regulating one's ethical dispositions that I highlight in the concept of "ethical labour." Although it cannot be directly commodified, ethical labour is a form of labour as it consumes energy and is integral to the performance of other forms of labour, particularly intimate and emotional ones. This formulation of ethical labour draws on my long-term ethnographic research with a group of young women migrants working as hostesses in high-end nightclubs in southeast China. Many of them perform socially stigmatized work with the goal of contributing to their family and saving money for a dignified life in the future. Ethical labour is essential to their hostess work because it enables them to juggle multiple affective relationships and defer the fundamental ethical conflict. They express ethical labour through the phrase "to be a little more realistic," making sure that they obtain what they want at a particular moment. But ethical labour does not simply mean pushing ethical questions aside. It is sustained by conscious effort and is overshadowed by fears of ageing and failure to achieve long-term life goals. Prolonged ethical labour often fails to resolve ethical conflict and may intensify one's stress. My analysis of these women migrants' situation contributes to the sex-as-work debate regarding women's agency in work and their subjection to exploitation.


Author(s):  
Moonok Kim ◽  
Younjae Oh ◽  
Byunghye Kong

Ethical conflicts among nurses can undermine nurses’ psychological comfort and compromise the quality of patient care. In the last decade, several empirical studies on the phenomena related to ethical conflicts, such as ethical dilemmas, issues, problems, difficulties, or challenges, have been reported; however, they have not always deeply explored the meaning of ethical conflicts experienced by nurses in geriatric care. This study aims to understand the lived experiences of ethical conflict of nurses in geriatric hospitals in South Korea. A phenomenological study was conducted. In-depth, face-to-face interviews were performed with nine registered nurses who cared for elderly patients in geriatric hospitals in South Korea between August 2015 and January 2016. Three main themes emerged from the analysis: (1) confusing values for good nursing, (2) distress resulting from not taking required action despite knowing about a problem, and (3) avoiding ethical conflicts as a last resort. It was found that for geriatric nurses to cope with ethical conflicts successfully, clear ethical guidance, continuing ethics education to improve ethical knowledge and moral behaviors, and a supportive system or program to resolve ethical conflicts involving nurses should be established.


2000 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 360-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara K Redman ◽  
Sara T Fry

The purpose of this article is to report what can be learned about nurses’ ethical conflicts by the systematic analysis of methodologically similar studies. Five studies were identified and analysed for: (1) the character of ethical conflicts experienced; (2) similarities and differences in how the conflicts were experienced and how they were resolved; and (3) ethical conflict themes underlying four specialty areas of nursing practice (diabetes education, paediatric nurse practitioner, rehabilitation and nephrology). The predominant character of the ethical conflicts was disagreement with the quality of medical care given to patients. A significant number of ethical conflicts were experienced as ‘moral distress’, the resolution of which was variable, depending on the specialty area of practice. Ethical conflict themes underlying the specialty areas included: differences in the definition of adequacy of care among professionals, the institution and society; differences in the philosophical orientations of nurses, physicians and other health professionals involved in patient care; a lack of respect for the knowledge and expertise of nurses in specialty practice; and difficulty in carrying out the nurse’s advocacy role for patients.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 34-34
Author(s):  
Casey L. McAtee ◽  
Joseph Lubega ◽  
Michael E. Scheurer ◽  
Rachel E. Rau

Black and Hispanic children with AML tend to have worse outcomes compared to White non-Hispanic children. Potential contributing factors include higher acuity at presentation, higher infection related mortality, and less availability of hematopoietic stem cell donors (Winestone. Amer J Hematol. 2017; Aplenc. Blood 2006; Gramatges. PBC 2017). We hypothesized that differences in disease biology contribute to inferior outcomes along racial/ethnic lines, and these differences may be apparent among specific cytogenetic subsets. To test this hypothesis, we mined the publicly available TARGET AML dataset which includes 956 newly diagnosed children with AML enrolled on Children's Cancer Group study CCG-2961 or Children's Oncology Group studies AAML03P1 or AAML0531. There were 557 White, non-Hispanic (WNH), 115 Black (including six Black Hispanic), 170 non-Black Hispanic, 45 Asian, and 69 patients of other races included in our analysis. Overall survival (OS) was defined as time from study entry until death; event free survival (EFS) was time from study entry to first event (induction failure, death, death without remission, or relapse). Patients were censored at the date of last contact. We used the Kaplan-Meier method to estimate OS and EFS; the log-rank statistic tested survival differences. Pearson's chi-squared or Fisher's exact test was used to test for differences between proportions. Welch's t-test, ANOVA, and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests were used for continuous variables. Comparing tumor cytogenetics by race/ethnicity: when compared to WNH children, t(8;21) was more common among Black (OR=2.03; 95% CI: 1.20-3.42) and Hispanic (OR=2.04; 95% CI: 1.29-3.24) children. Black children were also more likely to have either -5/-5q or -7/-7q compared to WNH (OR=2.60; 95% CI: 1.29-5.23). We then interrogated KMT2A rearrangements (KMT2Ar), finding that there was no difference in the percentage of patients with a KMT2Ar on the basis of race/ethnicity. The distribution of various KMT2A fusions in Hispanic patients was not significantly different than WNH, but Black children were more likely to have t(6;11)(q27;q23) both overall (OR=5.78; 95% CI: 1.73-19.28) and among patients with KMT2Ar (OR 7.29; 95% CI: 1.94-27.40). Black KMT2Ar children were older than WNH and Hispanic KMT2Ar children (11.2 vs. 6.5 years, p=0.002). Hispanic children with KMT2Ar had a higher presenting white blood cell count (WBC median 114,700/µL) compared to WNH (median WBC 49,600/µL; p=0.01) and Black (38,300/µL; p=0.006) children. We then investigated survival: similar to prior studies, Black children had inferior EFS and OS compared to WNH (both p<0.0001). Hispanic and Asian children had similar survival to WNH children. However, the EFS/OS of both Black and Hispanic children with KMT2Ar were worse than WNH with KMT2Ar (Fig1A,B), though the reasons for poor outcome were different for Black and Hispanic children. Eight of 21 Hispanic children had induction failure compared to 0/19 Black and 1/85 WNH children (p<0.001), whereas Black children tended to suffer death or relapse as first event. Higher WBC at presentation did not explain the difference in outcome for Hispanic children: when we restricted our analysis to those with a presenting WBC >100,000/µL, Hispanic children still had an inferior EFS compared to WNH with a trend towards inferior OS (Fig 1C, D). The poor outcome of Black children with KMT2Ar may be driven by the higher proportion with the known poor prognostic t(6;11) and older age; but even when restricted to age >10yrs, Black children tended to have worse outcomes compared to WNH patients. In conclusion, using the TARGET data set, we identified differences in tumor genetics, clinical features and outcome by race/ethnicity. Specifically, among KMT2Ar patients, we found that Black and Hispanic children had significantly worse outcomes than WNH - but for different reasons with potential biologic implications. The difference in age and distribution of KMT2A fusion among Black children suggest distinct AML pathogenesis, while higher presenting WBC and increased induction failure risk among Hispanic children suggest that genetic factors may contribute to disease phenotype and response to therapy. In ongoing work, we are investigating racial/ethnic differences in tumor biology and pharmacogenomics to better understand the causes of poor outcome with the ultimate aim of eliminating long-standing survival disparities. Disclosures Rau: Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Inc.: Consultancy, Other: Travel Fees.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanders Korenman ◽  
Ted Joyce ◽  
Robert Kaestner ◽  
Jennifer Walper

Abstract The Out-Of-Wedlock Birth Reduction Bonus (“Illegitimacy Bonus”), part of the 1996 welfare reform legislation, awarded up to $100 million in each of five years to the five states with the greatest reduction in the non-marital birth ratio. Alabama, Michigan, and Washington D.C. each won bonuses four or more times, claiming nearly 60% of award monies. However, for these bonus winners, changes in the racial composition of births accounted for between one-third and 100% of the decline in the non-marital birth ratio. The non-marital birth ratio fell most in D.C., averaging 1.5 percentage points per year over the award period. Declines in non-marital birth ratios in Michigan and Alabama were slight. But the non-marital birth ratio fell in D.C. in large part because the number of black children born there fell dramatically, and a decline in the black population alone accounted for one third of the decline in black births. Within-race changes in non-marital birth ratios raised the overall non-marital birth ratio 0.5 percentage points in Alabama, and lowered the non-marital ratio by one percentage point in Michigan, and by about three percentage points in Washington D.C. Because it was based on unadjusted changes in states’ aggregate non-martial birth ratios, the Illegitimacy Bonus rewarded racial/ethnic compositional changes at least as much as it rewarded declining non-marital birth ratios within major racial/ethnic groups.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Gaudine ◽  
Sandra M LeFort ◽  
Marianne Lamb ◽  
Linda Thorne

Much of the literature on clinical ethical conflict has been specific to a specialty area or a particular patient group, as well as to a single profession. This study identifies themes of hospital nurses’ and physicians’ clinical ethical conflicts that cut across the spectrum of clinical specialty areas, and compares the themes identified by nurses with those identified by physicians. We interviewed 34 clinical nurses, 10 nurse managers and 31 physicians working at four different Canadian hospitals as part of a larger study on clinical ethics committees and nurses’ and physicians’ use of these committees. We describe nine themes of clinical ethical conflict that were common to both hospital nurses and physicians, and three themes that were specific to physicians. Following this, we suggest reasons for differences in nurses’ and physicians’ ethical conflicts and discuss implications for practice and research.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-18
Author(s):  
Wanda K. Causseaux ◽  
A. Bruce Caster

Students frequently have difficulty systematically analyzing ethical situations.  They tend to respond to situations by indicating that a particular action is “just not right.”  This case uses the IMA Statement of Ethical Professional Practice as a framework for analyzing and resolving ethical conflict.  The case is based on cost/managerial accounting and is appropriate for late in a managerial accounting course or early in a junior level cost accounting course. The case involves cost analysis, and it examines gross margin versus contribution margin as tools for analyzing product profitability.  It also challenges the student to examine the behavior of several of the main characters from an ethical point of view and to examine pathways for resolving ethical conflicts.  Suggested solutions, additional discussion, and teaching notes are provided.  The story is based on a real situation with a privately held company.  Details have been changed to protect the identity of the persons and companies involved.


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