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The Norms and Corporatization of Medicine Influence Physician Moral Distress in the United States

Authors :
Jimmy Beck
Carla N Falco
Kimberly L. O’Hara
Hannah K Bassett
Cameron L. Randall
Stephanie Cruz
Janice L. Hanson
Wendy Dean
Kirsten Senturia
Source :
Teaching and learning in medicine.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

PhenomenonMoral distress, which occurs when someone's moral integrity is seriously compromised because they feel unable to act in accordance with their core values and obligations, is an increasingly important concern for physicians. Due in part to limited understanding of the root causes of moral distress, little is known about which approaches are most beneficial for mitigating physicians' distress. Our objective was to describe system-level factors in United States (U.S.) healthcare that contribute to moral distress among pediatric hospitalist attendings and pediatric residents.ApproachIn this qualitative study, we conducted one-on-one semi-structured interviews with pediatric hospitalist attendings and pediatric residents from 4 university-affiliated, freestanding children's hospitals in the U.S. between August 2019 and February 2020. Data were coded with an iteratively developed codebook, categorized into themes, and then synthesized.FindingsWe interviewed 22 hospitalists and 18 residents. Participants described in detail how the culture of medicine created a context that cultivated moral distress. Norms of medical education and the practice of medicine created conflicts between residents' strong sense of professional responsibility to serve the best interests of their patients and the expectations of a hierarchical system of decision-making. The corporatization of the U.S. healthcare system created administrative and financial pressures that conflicted with the moral responsibility felt by both residents and hospitalists to provide the care that their patients and families needed.InsightsThese findings highlight the critical role of systemic sources of moral distress. These findings suggest that system-level interventions must supplement existing interventions that target individual health care providers. Preventing and managing moral distress will require a broad approach that addresses systemic drivers, such as the corporatization of medicine, which are entrenched in the culture of medicine.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Medicine
Education

Details

ISSN :
15328015
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Teaching and learning in medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e3ab722c1c3ab905ee706e9967118c7b