Factors Impacting Ethical Behavior in Hospitals
Authors: Deshpande, Satish1; Joseph, Jacob2; Prasad, Rashmi3
Source: Journal of Business Ethics, Volume 69, Number 2, December 2006 , pp. 207-216(10)
Publisher: Springer
Abstract:
This study examines factors impacting ethical behavior of 203 hospital employees in Midwestern and Northwestern United States. Ethical behavior of peers had the most significant impact on ethical behavior. Ethical behavior of successful managers, professional education in ethics and sex of the respondents also significantly impacted ethical behavior. Nurses were significantly more ethical than other employees. Race of the respondent did not impact ethical behavior. Overclaiming scales indicated that social desirability bias did not significantly impact the results of our study. Implications of this study for researchers and practitioners are discussed.Keywords: hospitals; ethical behavior; nurses; overclaiming; ethical optimism
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10551-006-9086-5
Affiliations: 1: Email: satish.deshpande@wmich.edu 2: Email: ffjj@uaf.edu 3: Email: afrp2@cbpp.uaa.alaska.edu
Publication date: 2006-12-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Business
- By this author: Deshpande, Satish ; Joseph, Jacob ; Prasad, Rashmi

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