Project 460259

Moral distress in critical and primary care providers from the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-provincial mixed-methods case study

460259

Moral distress in critical and primary care providers from the COVID-19 pandemic: A cross-provincial mixed-methods case study

$248,373
Project Information
Study Type: Unclear
Research Theme: Health systems / services
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Grierson, Lawrence; Molinaro, Monica L
Co-Investigator(s): Agarwal, Gina (Ragini); Cook, Deborah J; Fiest, Kirsten M; Inglis, Gabrielle; Leslie, Myles; Niven, Daniel; Patel, Tejal; Peter, Elizabeth H; Vanstone, Meredith
Institution: McMaster University
CIHR Institute: Health Services and Policy Research
Program: O. Gr.: Addr. the Health Impacts of COVID-19 - Imp. of def/disp care on health
Peer Review Committee: Operating Grant : Addressing the Wider Health Impacts of COVID-
Competition Year: 2021
Term: 2 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

News reports have highlighted that hospital-based clinicians, including physicians, nurses, and social workers are leaving their professions, catalyzed by COVID-19 circumstances which resemble moral distress and moral injury. "Moral distress" is the response of a person who feels morally constrained by institutional or other constraints, and "moral injury" is when one feels morally betrayed by those in power during high stakes situations. Health care providers working in critical care and family medicine have expressed feeling more anxious and exhausted, and having negative mental health outcomes, including depression, burnout, apathy, and post-traumatic stress disorder, all of which resemble moral distress and moral injury. Critical care and family medicine were chosen for this study as their distress manifests in differing ways; these environments vary in their approaches to and goals of their clinical tasks and care provision with respect to practice settings, acuity, care continuity and relationships. This project aims to explore the effects of moral distress on health care providers in critical care and family medicine environments through the pandemic in two provinces with high infection rates (Ontario and Alberta). To do this, a case study methodology will be employed, in which quantitative data will be collected to measure rates of attrition and burnout, and qualitative methods will be employed to understand providers' experiences during the pandemic. The objective of this is to understand the contexts that shape their moral distress, in order to provide policy and institutional suggestions for stopping attrition and burnout.

No special research characteristics identified

This project does not include any of the advanced research characteristics tracked in our database.

Keywords
Burnout Case Study Covid-19 Critical Care Family Medicine Health Policy Moral Distress Primary Care Qualitative Methods