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Nurses" Knowledge of Law, Law Consciousness, and Will to Practice

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KMID : 0614820170230030290
À̹̾֠( Lee Mi-Aie ) - µ¿±¹´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú

º¯±Ý¼ø ( Byeon Keum-Soon ) - ÇýÀü´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú
°­¼±ÁÖ ( Kang Sun-Joo ) - Á¦ÁÖÇѶó´ëÇб³ °£È£Çаú

Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate nurses" knowledge of the law, consciousness, and will to practice and the relationships among factors affecting the will to practice.

Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted and data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, independent t-test, ANOVA, Pearson correlation coefficients and multiple regression.

Results: Most respondents were women (93.9%) and 75.6% of them had received basic education on law. The average score on knowledge of the law was 11.83¡¾3.07 for general law and 10.42¡¾3.32 for nursing law. The average score on consciousness of law and will to practice was 2.50¡¾0.31 and 4.32¡¾0.58, respectively. Differences were observed in knowledge of the law in terms of having taken a refresher course(F=5.87, p=.003); in consciousness of the law in terms of knowledge of the law (F=6.61, p<.002); and in will to practice according to age (F=7.30, p=.007) and educational level (F=13.08, p<.001). Factors influencing will to practice included behavioral and cognitive consciousness, general knowledge of law, and education. These factors explained 24% of the variance.

Conclusion: Nurses knowledge and consciousness regarding law was relatively lower than their will to practice. Systematic law education for nurses and repetitive research are recommended to prevent nursing malpractice.
KeyWords
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Knowledge, Consciousness, Practice wil, Law, Nurse
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