Moral Injuries in Healthcare Workers: What Causes Them and What to Do About Them?

IF 3.4 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Journal of Healthcare Leadership Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.2147/JHL.S396659
Sarah Rabin, Natalia Kika, Danielle Lamb, Dominic Murphy, Sharon Am Stevelink, Victoria Williamson, Simon Wessely, Neil Greenberg
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Abstract

Moral injury (MI) refers to the persisting distress which may occur following exposure to potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs). The COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to MI in healthcare workers, who have been found to experience more frequent PMIEs in their day-to-day work than those in other occupational groups such as the military. These events may occur on an individual, team, organizational or system level and have been associated with increased clinician burnout and distress, and poor psychological wellbeing. This paper focuses on healthcare workers' experiences of MI, including potential causes and ways to reduce them. There are myriad challenges that influence the development of MI, such as chronic understaffing and the pressure to treat high numbers of patients with limited resources. There are also multiple impacts of MI: at the individual-level, MI can lead to increased staff absences and understaffing, and prolonged patient contact with limited decision-making power. COVID-19 exacerbated such impacts, with a lack of organizational support during a time of increased patient mortality, and uncertainty and heightened pressure on the clinical frontline associated with scarce resources and understaffing. Potential methods for reduction of MI in healthcare workers include pre-exposure mitigation, such as fostering work environments which treat PMIEs in the same way as other occupational hazards and post-exposure mitigation, such as facilitating healthcare workers to process their experiences of PMIEs in peer support groups or with spiritual advisors and, if MI is associated with mental ill-health, talking therapies using trauma-focused and compassion-oriented frameworks.

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医护人员的道德伤害:原因和对策?
道德伤害(MI)是指暴露于潜在道德伤害事件(pmii)后可能发生的持续痛苦。COVID-19大流行引起了人们对医护人员心梗的关注,研究发现,与军队等其他职业群体相比,医护人员在日常工作中出现心梗的频率更高。这些事件可能发生在个人、团队、组织或系统层面,并与临床医生的倦怠和痛苦增加以及心理健康状况不佳有关。本文的重点是医护人员的经验,包括潜在的原因和方法来减少他们。影响心肌梗死发展的挑战数不胜数,例如长期人手不足和以有限资源治疗大量患者的压力。心肌梗死也有多重影响:在个人层面,心肌梗死可能导致工作人员缺勤和人手不足增加,患者接触时间延长,决策权有限。COVID-19加剧了这种影响,在患者死亡率上升的时期缺乏组织支持,以及与资源稀缺和人员不足相关的临床一线的不确定性和压力增加。减少卫生保健工作者的心肌梗死的潜在方法包括接触前缓解,例如营造以与其他职业危害相同的方式对待心肌梗死的工作环境,以及接触后缓解,例如促进卫生保健工作者在同伴支持小组或精神顾问中处理其对心肌梗死的经历,如果心肌梗死与精神疾病有关,则采用以创伤为重点和以同情为导向的框架进行谈话治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Healthcare Leadership
Journal of Healthcare Leadership HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES-
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.30%
发文量
27
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Efficient and successful modern healthcare depends on a growing group of professionals working together as an interdisciplinary team. However, many forces shape the delivery of healthcare; changes are being driven by the markets, transformations in concepts of health and wellbeing, technology and research and discovery. Dynamic leadership will guide these necessary transformations. The Journal of Healthcare Leadership is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal focusing on leadership for the healthcare professions. The publication strives to amalgamate current and future healthcare professionals and managers by providing key insights into leadership progress and challenges to improve patient care. The journal aspires to inform key decision makers and those professionals with ambitions of leadership and management; it seeks to connect professionals who are engaged in similar endeavours and to provide wisdom from those working in other industries. Senior and trainee doctors, nurses and allied healthcare professionals, medical students, healthcare managers and allied leaders are invited to contribute to this publication
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