Moral injury is a prevalent issue for secure mental healthcare staff, though understanding of the underlying mechanisms is limited. This multi-study paper explores several developmental, cognitive and emotional pathways to moral injury and associated wellbeing outcomes. Frontline and support staff from secure mental healthcare services were recruited to two cross-sectional studies ( = 527 and = 325, respectively), and completed several questionnaires. In the first study, findings indicated a serial mediating effect of childhood trauma symptoms, early maladaptive schemas, and maladaptive metacognitions in the pathway between exposure to potentially morally injurious events and moral injury symptoms. Moderating effects of social and organisational support were also apparent. Findings from study two supported pathways between moral injury and psychological, somatic and functional outcomes, which were mediated by negative emotional schema, with limited mediating effects for expressive suppression. Moderating effects of alexithymia on several mediating pathways were also noted. The results support a developmental-cognitive model to account for the development of moral injury and associated adverse well-being outcomes in secure mental healthcare staff. Drawing on the findings and wider literature, the Integrated Pathway Model of Moral Injury (IPM-MI) is proposed and discussed, offering a novel theoretical account that may inform several potential prevention and intervention strategies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01612840.2025.2473375 | DOI Listing |
BMC Psychol
March 2025
Malatya Turgut Ozal University, İkizce, Yeşilyurt/Malatya, 44900, Turkey.
Traumatic life experiences such as earthquakes are impactful on individuals' mental health and positive psychological characteristics are key assets for the preservation of mental health after stressful situations. Strength-based parenting and optimism are considered among those strengths to combat psychological problems including depression. The current study aimed to examine the longitudinal mediating effects of optimism between strength-based parenting and depression (model 1) and post-traumatic growth (model 2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhat people value today can differ from what they have valued. But what does this value variability mean in the context of healthcare? We ethically analyze the current state of research on the change of embedded values in healthcare systems and the driving processes behind it. Starting with a systematic literature review and a content analysis, we subject the selected articles to an ethical analysis through three ethical theories: principlism, value ethics, and utilitarianism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIssues Ment Health Nurs
March 2025
School of Psychology and Humanities, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK.
Moral injury is a prevalent issue for secure mental healthcare staff, though understanding of the underlying mechanisms is limited. This multi-study paper explores several developmental, cognitive and emotional pathways to moral injury and associated wellbeing outcomes. Frontline and support staff from secure mental healthcare services were recruited to two cross-sectional studies ( = 527 and = 325, respectively), and completed several questionnaires.
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