Abstract
Introduction
The perception by health professionals of respect for users’ rights is a fundamental concept declared by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. 1 Indeed, respect for users’ rights is a well-known component of organizational well-being in health and mental health services, as underlined in the literature.2,3 Recently confirmed by several surveys carried out by the Well-Being at Work and Respect Right Questionnaire (WWRR) in Italy,4–7 in the Mediterranean Region,8,9 and in Latin America.10,11 All these studies have consistently demonstrated that the greater the perception of respect for users’ rights in a service that provides care, the greater the job satisfaction and the perception of organizational well-being in the health workers.
Article 4 on “General obligations” of the CRPD states in paragraph 1 subparagraph “i” that “States Parties undertake to ensure and promote the full realization of all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all persons with disabilities without discrimination of any kind based on disability. To this end, States Parties undertake To promote the training of professionals and staff working with persons with disabilities in the rights recognized in the present Convention to provide better the assistance and services guaranteed by those rights.” Consistent with this direction, various health professions courses at the University of Cagliari have introduced the study of the CRPD as a foundational discipline of preparation, together with an introduction to the concepts of the new rights-based vision of disability, introduced by the same treaty as a synthesis and overcoming of the medical and social. In parallel, an attempt was made to develop an evolutionary vision of disability that emphasizes the specific potential of individuals in a path of resilience and recovery. 12 This is true of health professions courses for rehabilitation and prevention professionals and nurses. At the end of this journey, we wanted to verify whether these concepts had taken root among young students in their final year of healthcare professions. We also wanted to raise awareness among students of other courses (including the course for medical doctors) to introduce these principles in future years. We, therefore, administered the WWRR questionnaire to the students, asking them to complete it about the treatment department they attended for the conduct of their internship in the last year of the course. Their assessments were compared with those of the staff of the thick departments, which had previously been collected for another survey.
This work aims to compare the judgments on the perception of respect for rights and organizational well-being of students of health professions (doctors, nurses, professional educators, and health assistants) with those of health professionals in the same departments.
Thanks to the path conducted, we hypothesize that students could better perceive rights and have a more optimistic vision of the relationship between rights and organizational well-being.
Methods
Design: This is a quantitative cross-sectional study.
The sample consisted of university students who voluntarily decided to participate in the research when contacted. The data collection period was over ten days at the Universita degli Studi di Cagliari facilities. Conversely, the control group consisted of health workers from four departments of the University Hospital of Cagliari, whose information was obtained in previous studies. 4
Study instruments: Participants who agreed to participate signed an informed consent. They were then asked to complete the following documents:
Study instrument: students who decided to participate in this research signed informed consent and the data privacy law based on Italian and European Union regulations. The questionnaire applied consisted of:
(a) Sociodemographic data such as age, sex, service where they work (in the case of employees of the University Hospital of Cagliari or the year of study and course in the case of students). The university programs with fewer students and those that had less adherence were grouped and named in the category of “others.”
(b) The “Well-Being at Work and Respect for Human Rights” questionnaire (WWRR) has already been validated in the Italian version. 8 The WWRR was inspired by the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) and the WHO QualityRights project.13–15
The WWRR measures, in the first five items, the perception of respect for human rights, the organizational climate at work, well-being, and satisfaction with care/work. The answers are coded on a Likert-type scale, with a value from 1 (not at all satisfied) to 6 (completely satisfied).
Item 6 asks about the perception of the adequacy of resources in the workplace or the ward where the student is doing their internship. The coding is from 1 for “Completely satisfied” to 5 for “Not satisfied at all.”
Item 7 asks which health professionals the interviewee thinks it would be necessary to add to the staff in the health service where they work or intern.
This questionnaire or instrument has been validated and administered to health workers,8,10 users, 5 and caregivers 16 in different linguistic and cultural contexts. This research was administered to health workers and students from the health faculty who have carried out training practices in hospital services where patients are cared for. A more detailed and complete description is available in the cited research or validation studies.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis. The statistical analysis was carried out by comparing the scores of the answers in each item of the students and health workers by one-way ANOVA. The answers concerning item 7 and the descriptive items of the two samples, measured by nominal data, were compared using chi-square tests (adopting Yate correction when needed).
Ethical considerations: the Ethics Committee of the University Hospital of Cagliari checked and gave approval with amendment 1 of May 28, 2023; the study took into account the Helsinki Declaration of 1995 and its revisions, and also by the guidelines of the World Medical Association, 17 each participant in this study signed an informed consent, which explained in detail that the information obtained would be analysed and collected anonymously. Participants could withdraw from participating in this study at any time if they considered it necessary; clarifications and doubts regarding the research were clarified through the contact that is in the informed consent.
Results
Table 1 describes the characteristics of the two samples. Due to the intrinsic characteristics of the two groups, the students are younger, with greater female representation, and with all participants having completed high school but not graduated. The answers to the WWRR questions from number 1 to number 6 are shown in Table 2. The students’ answers tend toward greater optimism or judgment and are more oriented toward a positive evaluation. With statistically significant differences from question (2) How much do you believe that the users of the service in which you work are satisfied? (chi-square 1df = 6.379; p = 0.012), (3) How satisfied are you with the organizational aspects of your work/how your work is organized? (chi-square 1df = 4.956; p = 0.027), and 5. To what extent do you believe that the human rights of the staff working in your service are respected? (chi square 1df = 4.582; p = 0.033). Regarding item 7 (Table 3), it is noted that while the health workers indicated a maximum of two professional figures and, in many cases, did not answer the question, the students indicated, on average, more than two figures that would be useful. Both groups indicated the nurse as the figure who would be most useful, although with greater frequency among students (38.9% vs 28.6%, F = 10.282 p = 0.001). The placement in third place in the response ranking for doctors is also similar, in this case, without statistically significant differences in the frequency of responses between the two groups. Some differences also emerge in the placement of “professionals for personal care,” which is the second choice for health professionals 23.3%, the fourth for students 9.6% (F = 25.405, P < 0.0001), and for rehabilitation technicians (physiologists, educators, speech therapists) which appear to be the fifth choice for health professionals 9.7%, the second for students 23.8% (F = 12.569, P < 0.0001). A big difference emerges in the indication of psychologists, who appear to be the fourth choice among health professionals, with 13.6% of the answers compared to none out of 625 professional figures indicated by the students (F = 93.705, P < 0.0001). Students do not indicate any response regarding Social Workers compared to 2.6% of health professionals (F = 12.569, P < 0.0001). The answer regarding other professional figures is also more frequent among students (5.4% vs 0%). However, these diverse answers concern at most two per professional figure (for example, sports technicians, dentists, administrators, and midwives).
Socio-demographic characteristics of the study samples.
Comparison on answers at item 1–6 of WWRR about health workers and users of mental health services of South Sardinia.
Needs for type of health workers in the service in which I work/I’m cared (Item 7 WWRR).
Discussion
This research has shown that students’ perception of respect for the rights of users of health services and the quality of these is optimistic. Students’ responses are more confident about health workers, user satisfaction, respect for the rights of health workers, and the perception of the organizational climate in the health services where they received their training in health practices. This was expected because the post-COVID period has been characterized by more significant work-related stress among health professionals in Italy.18,19
Another objective of this research was to raise awareness among students about the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). In this sense, the answers to question 7 are particularly striking. The UN Convention aims to modify the traditional medical-health model that describes disability only as a result of damage without considering contextual barriers, such as physical and social barriers that hinder labor and social inclusion, as described in Article 1, paragraph 2 of the CRPD. 20
The results show that although students emphasize the importance of technical rehabilitation figures (physiotherapists, speech therapists, etc.), they do not give importance to roles that promote social and labor inclusion, such as psychologists or social workers. On the other hand, health workers with work experience give greater importance to these roles.
These results are worrying and reflect a perception by future health professionals that is excessively focused on individualized health and the technical response to the damage caused by pathology and disability.
Although precision medicine has had significant advances in recent times, emphasizing exclusively the technical training of university students in the faculty of health could have less than positive implications. It is consistent with the principles of the CRPD. However, it does not promote global and community health care, an essential element to highlight that the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted this lack of attention. It is hypothesized that one of the reasons health system responses were inadequate is a focus almost entirely on personalized medicine and little emphasis on a broader approach, such as community health and the relationship between health as such and social support.21,22
This approach also underlines the importance of strengthening health communication, which is necessary to give value to professional figures that students in the faculty of health do not consider important. 23 These findings reinforce the idea of inserting the concepts of the CRPD in a more detailed way in the university training programs of future professionals; as we have described in the introductory part, it is a commitment and partial responsibility of the recipient states, especially those that have signed the additional protocols and have agreed to be under the supervision of the United Nations monitoring committee.
These reflections are even more timely in Italy and the European Union, which have not only signed this Convention and its additional protocols but have also incorporated these principles of the CRPD in the legislative sphere, both national and of the European community.
Limits
The study has obvious limitations in recruiting samples voluntarily and, therefore, in their lack of representativeness. Other limitations are due to the imperfect correspondence between the students’ judgment and that of the health workers based on the correspondence of the work or internship department. Another bias may be because the post-pandemic condition during which the study took place was characterized by numerous absences from work due to work stress, and it is known that the operators most marked by burnout are often those most critical of the healthcare institution.
Another limitation is that omitting questions about whether users have psychotherapy or counselling interventions as a protective factor or to improve mental health symptoms could have given a more detailed view of the factors that can influence organizational well-being and job satisfaction in the health field. For this reason, future studies that can consider these factors as part of the analysis are recommended.
Conclusions
The study shows that students of the health professions, in contrast with experienced health professionals, consider figures such as the psychologist and the social worker less critical in the context of care services. If this were confirmed, we would need to reflect on whether the training of health professions is not being directed toward a vision that pays little attention to a holistic vision of illness and disability.
Footnotes
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The project benefit of the project “QualityRights” funded by the call “Legge regionale 19 dicembre 2023, n. 17. Finanziamento anno 2023.”
