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Article

Nurses' perceptions of and responses to morally distressing situations

Details

Citation

Varcoe C, Pauly B, Storch JL, Newton LJ & Makaroff KS (2012) Nurses' perceptions of and responses to morally distressing situations. Nursing Ethics, 19 (4), pp. 488-500. https://doi.org/10.1177/0969733011436025

Abstract
Research on moral distress has paid limited attention to nurses' responses and actions. In a survey of nurses' perceptions of moral distress and ethical climate, 292 nurses answered three open-ended questions about situations that they considered morally distressing. Participants identified a range of situations as morally distressing, including witnessing unnecessary suffering, being forced to provide care that compromised values, and negative judgments about patients. They linked these situations to contextual constraints such as workload and described responses, including feeling incompetent and distancing themselves from patients. Participants described considerable effort to effect change, calling into question the utility of defining moral distress as an "inability to act due to institutional constraints" or a "failure to pursue a right course of action." Various understandings of moral distress operated, and action was integral to their responses. The findings suggest further conceptual work on moral distress and effort to support system-level change.

Keywords
Incompetence; moral agency; moral distress; nursing action; organizational context;

Journal
Nursing Ethics: Volume 19, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date01/07/2012
Publication date online22/05/2012
PublisherSAGE
ISSN0969-7330
eISSN1477-0989

People (1)

Professor Bernadette Pauly

Professor Bernadette Pauly

Honorary Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences