Journal article
Towards an ethics framework for Australian health promotion practitioners: An exploratory mixed methods study
Health Promotion Journal of Australia, Vol.33(1), pp.71-82
2022
PMID: 33565664
Abstract
Ethical values underpin the health promotion discipline and profession, and competencies required for professional practice. Understanding how ethical values are translated into professional practice is critical. The aim of this exploratory sequential mixed methods study was to explore Australian health promotion stakeholder perspectives about ethical health promotion practice.
A face-to-face group-based workshop (n=15), online survey (n=77) and in-depth individual interviews (n=15) collected qualitative and quantitative data from health promotion stakeholders. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse quantitative and thematic analysis to analyse qualitative data.
Tensions emerged regarding the nomenclature of ethical health promotion practice, with ethics framed largely by participants as related to formal approval for research. A range of barriers and enables to ethical practice were identified. Barriers related to obtaining ethical approvals and working with specific population groups and communities. Enablers included professional development opportunities, access to a specialised human research ethics committee, and better understanding of what is meant by 'ethical practice'.
Findings suggest the need for an ethical health promotion practice framework and resources for practitioners and organisations throughout Australia. We propose a framework comprising two pillars: 1. developing critical practice; and 2. building the evidence-base for health promotion. SO WHAT?: This study recognises the need for increased dialogue about the ethical foundations of health promotion. The development of a health promotion ethics framework can better support the development of ethical practice in the Australian health promotion discipline and profession.
Details
- Title
- Towards an ethics framework for Australian health promotion practitioners: An exploratory mixed methods study
- Authors
- Krysten Blackford (Corresponding Author) - Curtin UniversityJustine Leavy (Author) - Curtin UniversityJane Taylor (Author) - University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, School of Health and Behavioural Sciences - LegacyElizabeth Connor (Author) - Curtin UniversityGemma Crawford (Author) - Curtin University
- Publication details
- Health Promotion Journal of Australia, Vol.33(1), pp.71-82; 12
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
- Date published
- 2022
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpja.466
- ISSN
- 2201-1617; 1036-1073
- PMID
- 33565664
- Copyright note
- © Australian Health Promotion Association. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; School of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Legacy; School of Health - Public Health
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99514108202621
- Output Type
- Journal article
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- Domestic collaboration
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- Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
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