Examining the Psychometric Properties of the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale in a Sample of First Responders

Tappenden, Peter C.; Cole, Travis A.; Valentine, Jennifer N.; Lilly, Michelle M.

Examining the Psychometric Properties of the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale in a Sample of First Responders

Tappenden, Peter C.; Cole, Travis A.; Valentine, Jennifer N.; Lilly, Michelle M.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: There is emerging evidence that first responders, like military personnel, are at risk for exposure to potentially morally injurious events. However, studies examining expressions of moral injury in first responders are nascent, in large part due to the limited number of measures validated for use in this population. To address this gap, the present study sought to investigate the psychometric properties of the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale—Military Version (EMIS-M) in a sample of first responders. METHOD: The psychometric properties of the EMIS-M were investigated in a sample of 228 first responders to determine reliability, convergent validity, discriminative validity, and divergent validity. In addition, confirmatory factor analysis was conducted to test the bifactor model identified in a veteran sample (Currier et al., 2018). RESULTS: Results yielded an excellent fit for the bifactor model with correlated self-directed and other-directed subscales identified in the EMIS-M development study. In addition, the measure evidenced strong reliability, convergent validity, discriminative validity, and divergent validity. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of the present study suggest that the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale—First Responder Version is a psychometrically sound measure capable of assessing self- and other-directed expressions of moral injury in first responders. The significance of these findings to our understanding of moral injury in first responders and their implications for future research are discussed.

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Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy
2023
Profession(s)
Public Safety Workers (General)
Topic(s)
Moral Distress or Moral Injury
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Descriptive / Qualitative Study
Action Strategy Area(s)
Measurement
Setting(s)
Community
Academic Role(s)
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