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Organizational Impact on Healthcare Workers' Moral Injury During COVID-19

Katie E. Nelson, Ginger C. Hanson, Danielle Boyce, Cathaleen D. Ley, Deborah Swavely, Michelle Reina, Cynda Hylton Rushton

2021JONA The Journal of Nursing Administration73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to explore relationships between organizational factors and moral injury among healthcare workers and the impact of perceptions of their leaders and organizations during COVID-19. BACKGROUND: COVID-19 placed healthcare workers at risk for moral injury, which often involves feeling betrayed by people with authority and can impact workplace culture. METHODS: Secondary data from a Web-based survey of mid-Atlantic healthcare workers were analyzed using mixed methods. Data were synthesized using the Reina Trust & Betrayal Model. RESULTS: Fifty-five percent (n = 328/595) of respondents wrote comments. Forty-one percent (n = 134/328) of commenters had moral injury scores of 36 or higher. Three themes emerged: organizational infrastructure, support from leaders, and palliative care involvement. Respondents outlined organizational remedies, which were organized into 5 domains. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest healthcare workers feel trust was breached by their organizations' leaders during COVID-19. Further study is needed to understand intersections between organizational factors and moral injury to enhance trust within healthcare organizations.

Topics & Concepts

Health careMoral injuryPublic relationsPsychologyNursingBusinessSocial psychologyMoral disengagementPoison controlOccupational safety and healthOrganizational cultureContext (archaeology)Human factors and ergonomicsOrganizational ethicsApplied psychologySuicide preventionInjury preventionHealthcare systemControl (management)Ethics in medical practiceWorkplace Violence and BullyingHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout