Ethics education constitutes a fundamental component of nursing development, shaping practitioners capable of sound moral judgment, responsible action, and ethically grounded clinical decision-making. Despite long-standing written ethical codes within the nursing profession, substantial gaps persist between theoretical instruction and real-world practice, leading to fragmented moral competence among nursing students and nurses. This discussion paper synthesizes evidence from the “Promoting a Morally Competent Nurse” project, insights derived from an international blended intensive program to examine the multifaceted challenges that hinder effective nursing ethics education, and expert contributions. Identified challenges include complexity of ethics theories; inconsistencies in the nursing curricula; the misalignment between formal and hidden curriculum; lack of resources and time dedicated to ethics education; inconsistencies in the training methods; and issues related to ethical leadership. The paper argues that cultivating moral competence requires more than the transmission of theoretical knowledge -it demands experiential learning, role modelling, and ethically supportive environments. A roadmap is proposed outlining complementary roles for academic nurses and nurse managers in strengthening ethics education across educational and clinical settings. Enhancing ethical leadership, harmonizing curricula, and investing in educator preparation are critical steps toward building an ethically resilient nursing workforce The paper concludes that ethical competence is not a static achievement but a lifelong developmental process that must be nurtured through intentional, coordinated, and context-sensitive strategies.

The challenges of teaching nursing ethics: Navigating complexities in education and practice. A discussion paper

Chiappinotto, Stefania;Palese, Alvisa
2026-01-01

Abstract

Ethics education constitutes a fundamental component of nursing development, shaping practitioners capable of sound moral judgment, responsible action, and ethically grounded clinical decision-making. Despite long-standing written ethical codes within the nursing profession, substantial gaps persist between theoretical instruction and real-world practice, leading to fragmented moral competence among nursing students and nurses. This discussion paper synthesizes evidence from the “Promoting a Morally Competent Nurse” project, insights derived from an international blended intensive program to examine the multifaceted challenges that hinder effective nursing ethics education, and expert contributions. Identified challenges include complexity of ethics theories; inconsistencies in the nursing curricula; the misalignment between formal and hidden curriculum; lack of resources and time dedicated to ethics education; inconsistencies in the training methods; and issues related to ethical leadership. The paper argues that cultivating moral competence requires more than the transmission of theoretical knowledge -it demands experiential learning, role modelling, and ethically supportive environments. A roadmap is proposed outlining complementary roles for academic nurses and nurse managers in strengthening ethics education across educational and clinical settings. Enhancing ethical leadership, harmonizing curricula, and investing in educator preparation are critical steps toward building an ethically resilient nursing workforce The paper concludes that ethical competence is not a static achievement but a lifelong developmental process that must be nurtured through intentional, coordinated, and context-sensitive strategies.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11390/1329732
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