Moral Distress in Nephrology: Perceived Barriers to Ethical Clinical Care

Moral distress occurs when individuals are unable to act in accordance with what they believe to be ethically correct or just. It results from a discrepancy between a clinician’s perception of “the right thing to do” and what is actually happening and is perpetuated by perceived constraints that lim...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of kidney diseases 2020-08, Vol.76 (2), p.248-254
Hauptverfasser: Ducharlet, Kathryn, Philip, Jennifer, Gock, Hilton, Brown, Mark, Gelfand, Samantha L., Josland, Elizabeth A., Brennan, Frank
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container_end_page 254
container_issue 2
container_start_page 248
container_title American journal of kidney diseases
container_volume 76
creator Ducharlet, Kathryn
Philip, Jennifer
Gock, Hilton
Brown, Mark
Gelfand, Samantha L.
Josland, Elizabeth A.
Brennan, Frank
description Moral distress occurs when individuals are unable to act in accordance with what they believe to be ethically correct or just. It results from a discrepancy between a clinician’s perception of “the right thing to do” and what is actually happening and is perpetuated by perceived constraints that limit the individual from speaking up or enacting change. Moral distress is reported by many clinicians in caring for patients with serious illness, including chronic kidney disease and kidney failure. If left unidentified, unexpressed, or unaddressed, moral distress may cause burnout, exhaustion, detachment, and ineffectiveness. At an extreme, moral distress may lead to a desire to abandon the speciality entirely. This article offers an international perspective on moral distress in nephrology in diverse contexts and health care systems. We examine and discuss the sociocultural factors that contribute to moral distress in nephrology and offer suggestions for interventions from individual provider, facility, and health care systems perspectives to reduce the impact of moral distress on nephrology providers.
doi_str_mv 10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.09.018
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects clinical ethics
conservative care
end-of-life care
end-stage renal disease (ESRD)
ethics
job satisfaction
kidney failure
medical decision making
Moral distress
nephrology
physician burnout
review
title Moral Distress in Nephrology: Perceived Barriers to Ethical Clinical Care
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