Ethical values in college education: A mixed-methods pilot study to assess Health Sciences students' perceptions
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López del Hierro Casado, Marta
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Background: Society demands a university education grounded on ethical principles. Education in ethics values is
responsibility of universities but will not be viable unless also adopted by directly responsible agents, the teachers
who work with the students. For this reason, our primary research objective was to conduct an in-depth analysis of
how Health Sciences students self-perceive the ethical dimension.
Methods: A mixed research methodology with two phases, qualitative and quantitative, allowed us to address
our research question from two complementary viewpoints. Conversational interviews were conducted in an
intentional and purposive sample to identify a wide range of discursive representations. A questionnaire was
designed based on previous studies and the topics of qualitative research. The response format for the
questionnaire followed a Likert scale and modulators such as sex, age, degree and the score of a social desirability
test were examined.
Results: After 24 conversational interviews, three main thematic blocks (coinciding with the three subscales of the
questionnaire) were identified: “attitudes for harmony in human relations”, “construction of the self” and “rules and
regulations”. A total of 246 students completed a questionnaire with 39 items. The total scores ranged from 93 to
152 points, with an average score of 122.72 ± 10.64 points. Responsibility, the basic rules of education and respect
were perceived as the two most important values, whereas solidarity and social participation as the least important.
Results showed a significant positive linear correlation between total score on the questionnaire and age and social
desirability. Age was also a significant predictor for the total score and the subscale score “rules and regulations”.
The students´ responses seemed to be conditioned by the degree of social desirability that they present.
Conclusions: The ad-hoc questionnaire captured the maintenance of high ethical values in our college
undergraduate students, which may be directly related to enhanced social desirability. The scores obtained on the
questionnaire were correlated with the students’ age, which may indicate that values might tend to acquire
progressively more importance as students grow older. Further research is warranted to delve deeper on the
determinants of professionalism and ethical decision-making in college students.
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Hernando, M.A., Diez Vega, I., López del Hierro, M., Martínez Alsina, N., Díaz Meco, R-, Busto, M.J., Martiañez, N.L., & González Cuevas, G. (2018). Ethical values in college education: A mixed-methods pilot study to assess Health Sciences students' perceptions. BMC Medical Education, 18(1): 289. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-018-1396-7








