When Healthcare Professionals Cannot Do the Right Thing: A Systematic Review of Moral Distress and Its Correlates

Lamiani, Giulia; Borghi, Lidia; Argentero, Piergiorgio

When Healthcare Professionals Cannot Do the Right Thing: A Systematic Review of Moral Distress and Its Correlates

Lamiani, Giulia; Borghi, Lidia; Argentero, Piergiorgio

Abstract

Moral distress occurs when professionals cannot carry out what they believe to be ethically appropriate actions. This review describes the publication trend on moral distress and explores its relationships with other constructs. A bibliometric analysis revealed that since 1984, 239 articles were published, with an increase after 2011. Most of them (71%) focused on nursing. Of the 239 articles, 17 empirical studies were systematically analyzed. Moral distress correlated with organizational environment (poor ethical climate and collaboration), professional attitudes (low work satisfaction and engagement), and psychological characteristics (low psychological empowerment and autonomy). Findings revealed that moral distress negatively affects clinicians’ wellbeing and job retention. Further studies should investigate protective psychological factors to develop preventive interventions.

View Resource
Journal of Health Psychology
2017
Profession(s)
Healthcare Workers (General)
Topic(s)
Moral Distress or Moral Injury
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Systematic Review / Meta-Analysis
Action Strategy Area(s)
Aligning Values
Worker & Learner Engagement
Setting(s)
No items found.
Academic Role(s)
No items found.
No items found.
No items found.