Parental Moral Distress and Moral Schism in the Neonatal ICU

被引:0
|
作者
Gabriella Foe
Jonathan Hellmann
Rebecca A. Greenberg
机构
[1] The Hospital for Sick Children,Bioethics Department
[2] University of Toronto,Department of Paediatrics
来源
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | 2018年 / 15卷
关键词
Decision-making; Parents; Neonatal intensive care; Moral distress; Bioethics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Ethical dilemmas in critical care may cause healthcare practitioners to experience moral distress: incoherence between what one believes to be best and what occurs. Given that paediatric decision-making typically involves parents, we propose that parents can also experience moral distress when faced with making value-laden decisions in the neonatal intensive care unit. We propose a new concept—that parents may experience “moral schism”—a genuine uncertainty regarding a value-based decision that is accompanied by emotional distress. Schism, unlike moral distress, is not caused by barriers to making and executing a decision that is deemed to be best by the decision-makers but rather an encounter of significant internal struggle. We explore factors that appear to contribute to both moral distress and “moral schism” for parents: the degree of available support, a sense of coherence of the situation, and a sense of responsibility. We propose that moral schism is an underappreciated concept that needs to be explicated and may be more prevalent than moral distress when exploring decision-making experiences for parents. We also suggest actions of healthcare providers that may help minimize parental “moral schism” and moral distress.
引用
收藏
页码:319 / 325
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Understanding the interplay of compassion fatigue and moral resilience on moral distress in ICU nurses: a cross-sectional study
    Yin, Jin
    Zhao, Lili
    Zhang, Na
    Xia, Hui
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2024, 12
  • [22] Moral resilience protects nurses from moral distress and moral injury
    Galanis, Petros
    Iliopoulou, Katerina
    Katsiroumpa, Aglaia
    Moisoglou, Ioannis
    Igoumenidis, Michael
    NURSING ETHICS, 2025,
  • [23] Moral trauma, moral distress, moral injury, and moral injury disorder: definitions and assessments
    Vanderweele, Tyler J.
    Wortham, Jennifer S.
    Carey, Lindsay B.
    Case, Brendan W.
    Cowden, Richard G.
    Duffee, Charlotte
    Jackson-Meyer, Kate
    Lu, Francis
    Mattson, Seth A.
    Padgett, Robert Noah
    Peteet, John R.
    Rutledge, Jonathan
    Symons, Xavier
    Koenig, Harold G.
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2025, 16
  • [24] Moral distress reconsidered
    McCarthy, Joan
    Deady, Rick
    NURSING ETHICS, 2008, 15 (02) : 254 - 262
  • [25] The Moral of the Story: Moral Case Deliberation As a Tool to Combat Burnout and Moral Distress
    Egodage, Tanya
    Martin, Matthew J.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2023, 51 (10) : 1431 - 1433
  • [26] MORAL DISTRESS: INABILITY TO ACT OR DISCOMFORT WITH MORAL SUBJECTIVITY?
    Repenshek, Mark
    NURSING ETHICS, 2009, 16 (06) : 734 - 742
  • [27] Analysis and evaluation of the moral distress theory
    Wilson, Melissa A.
    NURSING FORUM, 2018, 53 (02) : 259 - 266
  • [28] Moral Distress and Burnout in NICU Nurses
    Barr, Peter
    JOGNN-JOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC GYNECOLOGIC AND NEONATAL NURSING, 2022, 51 (04): : 441 - 449
  • [29] Moral Distress Recognition, Diagnosis, and Treatment
    Trautmann, Jennifer
    JOURNAL OF INFUSION NURSING, 2015, 38 (04) : 285 - 289
  • [30] Moral Distress in the Everyday Life of an intensivist
    Garros, Daniel
    FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS, 2016, 4