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Client confidentiality: Perspectives of students in a healthcare training programme
Author(s) -
Nico Nortjé,
Jo-Celene De Jongh
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
south african journal of bioethics and law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1999-7639
DOI - 10.7196/sajbl.2016.v9i1.460
Subject(s) - confidentiality , obligation , empathy , moral obligation , psychology , dilemma , duty , qualitative research , health care , health professionals , face (sociological concept) , medical education , social psychology , medicine , sociology , political science , law , social science , philosophy , epistemology
Background . Confidentiality is an important ethical principle for all health professionals and also has a legal bearing on duty. One of the most difficult issues health professionals face in their daily fieldwork practice is a conflict between their professional duties, as illustrated in keeping a patient’s medical information confidential, and having empathy with a family member’s need to know. This moral dilemma is difficult for students to circumvent and therefore this paper presents healthcare students’ perspectives of confidentiality. Methods . We aimed to explore healthcare students’ views and experiences of confidentiality as an ethical principle by adopting a qualitative explorative approach. Purposeful sampling was undertaken where specific individuals with specific experiences were identified. Data were collected by means of written responses from two open-ended questions and analysed thematically. Two themes emerged. Conclusion . Confidentiality, as with other ethical principles, is an important obligation of a good client-therapist relationship as identified by students. However, the students’ responses illustrate that it cannot be absolute, and cognisance must be taken as to when it is acceptable, and even desirable, to override confidentiality because of conflicting, greater duties.

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