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Seminars in nephrology · May 2021
Review Case ReportsMoral Distress and Moral Injury in Nephrology During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Kathryn Ducharlet, Mayuri Trivedi, Samantha L Gelfand, Hui Liew, Lawrence P McMahon, Gloria Ashuntantang, Frank Brennan, Mark Brown, and Dominique E Martin.
- Department of Renal Medicine, Eastern Health, Box Hill, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Electronic address: Kathryn.Ducharlet@easternhealth.org.au.
- Semin. Nephrol. 2021 May 1; 41 (3): 253-261.
AbstractAcross the world, challenges for clinicians providing health care during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic are highly prevalent and have been widely reported. Perspectives of provider groups have conveyed wide-ranging experiences of adversity, distress, and resilience. In understanding and responding to the emotional and psychological implications of the pandemic for renal clinicians, it is vital to recognize that many experiences also have been ethically challenging. The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted rapid and extensive transformation of health care systems and widely impacted care provision, heightening the risk of barriers to fulfillment of ethical duties. Given this, it is likely that some clinicians also have experienced moral distress, which can occur if an individual is unable to act in accordance with their moral judgment owing to external barriers. This review presents a global perspective of potential experiences of moral distress in kidney care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using nephrology cases, we discuss why moral distress may be experienced by health professionals when withholding or withdrawing potentially beneficial treatments owing to resource constraints, when providing care that is inconsistent with local prepandemic best practice standards, and when managing dual professional and personal roles with conflicting responsibilities. We argue that in addition to responsive and appropriate health system supports, resources, and education, it is imperative for health care providers to recognize and prevent moral distress to foster the psychological well-being and moral resilience of clinicians during extended periods of crisis within health systems.Crown Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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