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The Practice Setting: site of ethical conflict for some mothers and midwives122 Abuklea Street, Wilston, Queensland, Australia 4051, thompsof{at}gil.com.au Practitioners ethical orientation and responses vary between practice settings. Yet, currently, the ethics for midwifery practice that is explicit in the literature and which provides the ideals of socialization into practice, is that of bio(medical)ethics. Traditional bioethics, developed because of World War II atrocities and increased scientific research, is based on moral philosophy, normative theory, abstract universal principles and objective problem solving, all of which focus on right and wrong action for resolving dilemmas. They exclude context and relationship. Personal narratives of mothers and midwives contest the appropriateness of these accepted values and systems for childbirth because they induce conflict between work-place/service provider ethics and personal/professional midwifery ethics. In contrast to the disembedded and disembodied approach of biomedical ethics, an ethically adequate response in midwifery practice resonates more with the ethics of intimates, such as feminist virtue ethics.
Key Words: engagement ethical conflict midwives mothers practice setting relationship
Nursing Ethics, Vol. 10, No. 6,
588-601 (2003) This article has been cited by other articles:
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