Eth?cal Evaluation of Videos/Photographs with Obstetry Content Shared on Social Med?a by Health Profess?onals: A Qualitative Study.
Autor: | Bulut, Aleyna, Kartal, Yasemin Aydin, Aker, Sema |
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Předmět: |
SOCIAL media
RISK assessment QUALITATIVE research MIDWIVES HEALTH occupations students INTERVIEWING CONTENT analysis PRIVACY QUESTIONNAIRES CHILD abuse PHOTOGRAPHY DESCRIPTIVE statistics ETHICAL problems HUMAN rights SOUND recordings THEMATIC analysis ADVERTISING RESEARCH methodology PORNOGRAPHY STUDENT attitudes PHENOMENOLOGY DATA analysis software VIDEO recording OBSTETRICS MEDICAL ethics PEDOPHILIA |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Caring Sciences; May-Aug2024, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p667-676, 10p |
Abstrakt: | Aim: This qualitative study was conducted to determine the views of midwifery students on videos and photographs with obstetrics content shared by health professionals on social media and to evaluate them ethically. Materials and Method: The sample group of the study consisted of students continuing their education in the Midwifery Undergraduate programme of a public university. A semi-structured interview form was used for data collection and MAXQDA 2022 was used for content analysis of the data. Colaizzi's phenomenological interpretation method was used during data analysis. Results: As a result of the analysis of qualitative data, 4 themes and 10 sub-codes were created. It was determined that the mean age of the students participating in the study was 20.57±1.08. It was determined that midwife candidates mostly actively used Instagram (88.8%) and Youtube (50.0%) among social media applications. In addition, students who encountered uncensored birth moment or baby care posts, especially on social media; although they found these posts professionally instructive, they thought that sharing them openly on these platforms could cause trauma for individuals other than healthcare personnel and frighten women who have not yet given birth (66.6%), may lead to violation of personal rights (83.3%), even if permission is obtained from the photo/video owner, this may lead to ethical dilemmas in the future (27.7%), and that baby and child photos may cause some dangers in issues such as child abuse, child pornography and pedophilia (72.1%). Conclusion: According to the results of the study, it was determined that the students found the posts about obstetrics on social media useful for their own development if they did not violate ethical limits. However, students emphasised that they frequently encountered posts that violate confidentiality and privacy shared by health professionals for promotion, advertisement and commercial gain, and that these posts were unethical. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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