Exposure to moral stressors and associated outcomes in healthcare workers: prevalence, correlates, and impact on job attrition

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Abstract

Introduction: Healthcare workers (HCWs) often experience morally challenging situations in their workplaces that may contribute to job turnover and compromised well-being. This study aimed to characterize the nature and frequency of moral stressors experienced by HCWs during the COVID-19 pandemic, examine their influence on psychosocial-spiritual factors, and capture the impact of such factors and related moral stressors on HCWs’ self-reported job attrition intentions. Methods: A sample of 1204 Canadian HCWs were included in the analysis through a web-based survey platform whereby work-related factors (e.g. years spent working as HCW, providing care to COVID-19 patients), moral distress (captured by MMD-HP), moral injury (captured by MIOS), mental health symptomatology, and job turnover due to moral distress were assessed. Results: Moral stressors with the highest reported frequency and distress ratings included patient care requirements that exceeded the capacity HCWs felt safe/comfortable managing, reported lack of resource availability, and belief that administration was not addressing issues that compromised patient care. Participants who considered leaving their jobs (44%; N = 517) demonstrated greater moral distress and injury scores. Logistic regression highlighted burnout (AOR = 1.59; p

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APA

Nazarov, A., Forchuk, C. A., Houle, S. A., Hansen, K. T., Plouffe, R. A., Liu, J. J. W., … Richardson, J. D. (2024). Exposure to moral stressors and associated outcomes in healthcare workers: prevalence, correlates, and impact on job attrition. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2024.2306102

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