A preliminary investigation into the moral reasoning abilities of UK veterinarians
- PMID: 26109285
- DOI: 10.1136/vr.102775
A preliminary investigation into the moral reasoning abilities of UK veterinarians
Abstract
Veterinary medicine is an ethically challenging profession, but the ethical reasoning abilities of practising veterinarians in the UK have never been formally assessed. This study investigated moral reasoning ability in 65 qualified veterinarians (38 practising and 27 academic) and 33 members of the public in the UK using the Defining Issues Test. Academic veterinarians had higher scores than members of the public but practising veterinarians did not. There was large variation in moral reasoning abilities among qualified veterinarians. Moral reasoning score in veterinarians did not improve with years of experience. These results show that despite having a professional degree moral reasoning skills of practising veterinarians may be insufficient to deal with the demands of their profession. This could have implications for animal welfare, client services and veterinarian wellbeing. The results highlight the need for more training in this area.
Keywords: Defining Issues Test; ethcial dilemma; moral reasoning; veterinary.
British Veterinary Association.
Comment in
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Novice to expert? Teaching and development of moral reasoning skills.Vet Rec. 2015 Aug 1;177(5):122-3. doi: 10.1136/vr.h4033. Vet Rec. 2015. PMID: 26231875 No abstract available.
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