Moral injury and definitional clarity: Betrayal, spirituality and the role of chaplains

TJ Hodgson, LB Carey - Journal of religion and health, 2017 - Springer
This article explores the developing definition of moral injury within the current key literature.
Building on the previous literature regarding 'Moral Injury, Spiritual Care and the role of …

Communication disorders in palliative care: Investigating the views, attitudes and beliefs of speech and language therapists

R Hawksley, F Ludlow, H Buttimer… - International Journal of …, 2017 - magonlinelibrary.com
Aim: Speech and language therapists (SLTs) provide intervention for communication and
swallowing to patients with life-limiting conditions, such as dementia and head and neck …

How do healthcare practitioners talk about end-of-life conversations? A poetic inquiry

C Carter - Journal of Research in Nursing, 2017 - journals.sagepub.com
Despite agreement that end-of-life conversations should happen early on in the illness
trajectory, it is widely acknowledged that healthcare practitioners often engage in these …

Healthcare professional narratives on moral distress: disciplinary perspectives

AJ Davis, M Fowler, S Fantus, JJ Fins, M Joy… - Moral distress in the …, 2018 - Springer
Moral distress, although not always recognized or named as such, is a phenomenon
experienced by healthcare professionals from most disciplines and in diverse settings …

Supporting people with intellectual disability at end of life: Moral distress among staff caregivers during COVID-19

M McCarron, K Kelly, P McCallion, É Burke… - End of life and people …, 2022 - Springer
COVID-19 is likely to have compromised the management of end-of-life care. Disruptions
include the inability to respect advanced care planning, offer support to the person dying …

[PDF][PDF] What Is So Distressing About Moral Distress in Advanced Nursing Practice?

CM Ulrich, AB Hamric - CSR, 2008 - researchgate.net
Although many state and legislative barriers exist for advanced practice nurses (APNs) in
the United States (Lugo, O'Grady, Hodnicki, & Hanson, 2007), this group of providers are …

Epistemic injustice and nurse moral distress: perspective for policy development

PG Reed, CJ Rishel - Nursing science quarterly, 2015 - journals.sagepub.com
The focus of this article is epistemic injustice as an underlying explanation for the lack of
communication associated with moral distress in frontline nurses who provide end-of-life …

Understanding the Relationships Between Health Care Providers' Moral Distress and Patients' Quality of Death

J Spence, KA Indovina, F Loresto, K Eron… - Journal of palliative …, 2023 - liebertpub.com
Introduction: Moral distress is a commonly recognized phenomenon among health care
providers; however, the experience of moral distress by staff caring for patients who die …

Emotional impact on healthcare providers involved in medical assistance in dying (MAiD): a systematic review and qualitative meta-synthesis

SY Dholakia, A Bagheri, A Simpson - BMJ open, 2022 - bmjopen.bmj.com
Background Medical assistance in dying (MAiD) traverses challenging and emotionally
overwhelming territories: healthcare providers (HCPs) across jurisdictions experience …

“If I die, they do not care”: UK National Health Service staff experiences of betrayal-based moral injury during COVID-19.

L French, P Hanna, C Huckle - Psychological Trauma: Theory …, 2022 - psycnet.apa.org
Objective: The COVID-19 pandemic brought unparalleled pressure, stress, and a dramatic
change in practice to health care systems across the world. National Health Service (NHS) …