Abstract

BackgroundThe process of learning the professional values is started from the student’s entering to the university and to the workplace. This study compared the importance of professional values from the perspectives of nurses and nursing students.MethodsThis descriptive-analytical study was conducted on 250 nurses and 100 nursing students. Data were collected using the Nursing Professional Values Scale-Revised.ResultsAccording to the findings, the mean scores of nurses (3.68 ± 0.16) and nursing students’ (3.86 ± 0.17) perspective toward professional values were at an important level. Furthermore, the students’ perspective toward the professional values’ importance was significantly more favorable than those of nurses. The highest mean scores of professional values in the two groups were related to the caring and justice domains. Both groups considered activism and professionalism as the least important domains among the others.ConclusionsAs the findings suggest, we need to pay more attention to values training, especially professionalism and activism, during undergraduate education for preparing the nurses to work in today’s complex healthcare context. It is necessary to conduct more comprehensive studies for exploring the gap between theory and practice in different cultures and contexts.

Highlights

  • The process of learning the professional values is started from the student’s entering to the university and to the workplace

  • Aim The aim of this study was to compare the importance of professional values from the perspectives of nurses and nursing students

  • The present study was aimed to compare the professional values from viewpoints of the nurses and nursing students

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Summary

Introduction

The process of learning the professional values is started from the student’s entering to the university and to the workplace. This study compared the importance of professional values from the perspectives of nurses and nursing students. Professional values are associated with individuals’ beliefs, as members of a profession, about the appropriateness and desirability of something [2]. Values are crucial factors of what motivates and rewards nurses [3]. Studies have shown a significant relationship between the personal and professional values; individuals who desire to help others commonly choose the catering professions [5, 6]. In clinical decision-making, the nurses reflect upon what they have learned and believe to be true; these values are the foundation for nursing practice as well as the guidelines for nurses in interacting with patients, colleagues, other professions, and public [7]

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