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Surgical Intensive Care Unit Nurses' Coping With Moral Distress and Moral Residue: A Descriptive Qualitative Approach.
- Source :
-
Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing . Nov/Dec2024, Vol. 43 Issue 6, p298-305. 8p. - Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Background: Moral distress is defined as knowing the right course of action to take but being hindered by institutional constraints. Objective: The purpose of this study was to explore surgical intensive care unit (SICU) nurses' experiences of moral distress, moral residue, coping, and perceived quality of patient care. Method: A descriptive qualitative approach used in-depth, semistructured individual interviews of SICU nurses in a metropolitan, academic medical center until theoretical saturation occurred. Results: Five themes were identified from 21 interviews. Root causes of moral distress were identified including end-of-life care, conflicts with management, staffing, inadequate resources, communication problems, power differentials between physicians and nurses, and working with incompetent providers. Interviews highlighted the torment experienced by participants, which demonstrated that unacknowledged moral distress impacted their quality of patient care and well-being. Accounts provided insight into patient care that was perceived to be wrong. Well-being was affected as 2 participants sought inpatient psychiatric treatment for moral distress, whereas others were looking for new nursing careers, and many were in school to leave the SICU. Discussion: This study is unique because it corroborated Epstein and Hamric's Crescendo Effect framework by providing indepth analyses of moral distress, moral residue, and the crescendo effect and how these concepts developed within SICU nurses when left unaddressed. Interviews revealed that unacknowledgedmoral distress createdmoral residue, which subsequently impacted the quality of patient care and the nurses' well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *NURSE supply & demand
*PSYCHOLOGICAL distress
*OCCUPATIONAL adaptation
*MEDICAL quality control
*QUALITATIVE research
*ACADEMIC medical centers
*WHISTLEBLOWING
*PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout
*INTERVIEWING
*STATISTICAL sampling
*CONTENT analysis
*PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
*PATIENT advocacy
*ETHICS
*ROOT cause analysis
*THEMATIC analysis
*NURSING services administration
*INTENSIVE care units
*NURSES' attitudes
*JOB stress
*RESEARCH methodology
*COMMUNICATION
*NURSE-physician relationships
*CLINICAL competence
*COVID-19 pandemic
*CRITICAL care nurses
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 07304625
- Volume :
- 43
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 180164266
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1097/DCC.0000000000000665