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Topic leaders

 

Shira Maguen and Sonya Norman

UCSF School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, USA

Please contact Shira Maguen or Sonya Norman if you would like to initiate new projects or have other ideas about global collaboration related to moral injury. You can also directly submit your project proposal here.

What is Moral injury?

Moral injury refers to the profound psychological distress that can arise from being exposed to various situations involving acting, failing to act, or witnessing events that go against personal or collective core beliefs or expectations (e.g. Litz et al., 2009, Griffin et al, 2019; Ter Heide & Olff, 2023). Moral injury involves both an exposure to a potentially morally injurious event during which individuals experience or witness a transgression, as well as resulting symptoms of intense self-condemnation, spiritual struggles, and internal conflict regarding the moral implications of their actions. Experiencing moral injury carries significant emotional risks, as individuals may perceive their transgressions as irreparable, resulting in feelings of shame, guilt, despair, and loss of morale. Research suggests that moral injury is linked to cognitive, emotional, and behavioral changes, including social withdrawal, suicide behaviors, burnout, and psychiatric disorders such as depression and PTSD.

Projects

 

1. Translation and Validation of Moral Injury Scales in Brazil

 

Project group

PI: Bruno Messina Coimbra, PhD

Project group: Brendon Griffin, Chris Hoeboer, Shira Maguen, Andrea Feijo Mello, Marcelo Feijo Mello, Sonya Norman, Miranda Olff

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated ethical dilemmas faced by healthcare workers globally, particularly in developing countries where resource scarcity is prevalent (Coimbra et al., 2024). This situation has contributed to the emergence of significant symptoms of moral injury among healthcare professionals. However, it is worth noting that the moral injury literature currently lacks sufficient representation from these countries.

 

Aims and method

As evidence from developing countries may help to bring more insight into the moral challenges imposed on healthcare workers globally, we aim to introduce moral injury studies in Brazil by translating and validating two scales to Brazilian Portuguese: the Moral Injury Symptom Scale (MISS-HP) and the Moral Injury Distress Scale (MIDS). Given the significant emotional burden experienced by Brazilian healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic, this research holds particular relevance.

To ensure the validity of both the MISS-HP and the MIDS, we will follow the four-step guidelines outlined by the World Health Organization for scale translation and validation. Following this process, we intend to promote the study through social media platforms and recruit 300 healthcare workers in Brazil to participate in an online survey. To establish convergent and divergent validity, we

will employ scales that measure depression, anxiety, PTSD, burnout, and religious conflicts. Additionally, the construct validity of the Brazilian versions of the MISS-HP and the MIDS will be assessed using exploratory factor analysis. By undertaking these steps, we expect to contribute valuable insights into moral injury experienced by healthcare workers in Brazil.

2. Moral Injury Instruments in Portugal: Translation, Cultural Adaptation and Psychometric Properties

 

Project Group

PI: Mariana Gonçalves (PhD) & Ângela Maia (PhD)

Project Group:

Ana Lúcia Silva, PhD; Joana Neiva, Master; Joana Matos, Master; Cristiana Santos, Master; Rute Pereira, Master

Institution: Psychology Research Center, School of Psychology, University of Minho, Braga, Portugal

 

Background

Moral Injury is an enduring experience of negative moral emotions, such as guilt, shame, contempt, and anger. It arises when deeply held or commonly shared moral values are violated, suppressed, or betrayed. Originally observed in military personnel and veterans, moral injury often involves self-condemnation and a profound loss of faith in religious, moral, and societal institutions. These morally injurious events can happen in various contexts, including the military, healthcare, law enforcement, emergency, and many others, but also in persons that were exposed to trauma. While moral injury may coexist with Post-traumatic Stress-Disorder (PTSD), it is distinct because it doesn't stem from our body or mind's reaction to traumatic stress but rather revolves around a deep moral discomfort concerning our individual and collective actions, inactions, and fundamental values.

 

Aims and method

Aims: to translate, culturally adapt and analyse the psychometric properties of the Moral Injury instruments to Portuguese populations. Specifically, we will validate the Moral Injury Events Scale (MIES), the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale (EMIS) and the Moral Injury and Distress Scale (MIDS).

Sample: 700 civilians and professionals, aged 18 or higher, gender inclusive. We will include professional from different areas: health (e.g., doctors, nurses, psychologists), social (e.g., social workers), justice (e.g., law enforcement professionals, lawyers, judges) frontline (e.g., emergency, firefighters), and journalists.

3. Moral Trauma and Moral Healing in Ukrainian Combat and Civilian Populations

From Neurocognitive and Psychological Assessment to Preventative and Promotional Interventions

 

Project leader

Larysa Zasiekina, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University,  & Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge 

(lz464@cam.ac.uk).

Project group

Serhii Zasiekin, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, University College London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, 

Illia Kuznietsov, College of Health and Human Sciences, Department of Psychological Sciences, Laboratory of Computational Cognitive Neuroscience, Purdue University

Iryna Hlova, Department of General and Clinical Psychology, Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University,

Background

Little is known about moral trauma and moral healing in Ukrainian combat and civilian populations, both with regard to neurocognitive and psychological assessment as well as what preventative and promotional Interventions nay need to be developed.

Aims

  1. To examine moral injury and associated mental health symptoms (PTSD, depression and anxiety) in Ukrainian combat and civilian populations.

  2. To identify neural correlates of moral injury and compare them with neural correlates of PTSD.

  3. To develop preventative and promotional interventions for moral healing after military trauma. 

The following set of research questions were formulated: 

(RQ1) Are there significant differences in moral injury, PTSD, depression and anxiety symptoms between active-duty soldiers and the civilian population?

(RQ2) Are there significant differences in neural correlates of war-related moral injury and PTSD?

(RQ3) Are there gender effects in the two groups (active soldiers and civilian students) in relation to moral injury and associated mental health symptoms? 

(RQ4) Is a family history of genocide associated with moral injury, PTSD, depression and anxiety?_ 

(RQ5) Is the moral injury a predictor of PTSD in both groups?

 

The cultural adaptation and psychometric standardization of the MISS-M-SF questionnaire (the first Ukrainian-language diagnostic tool for assessing moral injury) were carried out during the project. The study has important theoretical and practical implications. It provides explicit criteria for distinguishing between moral injury and PTSD and developing the first Ukrainian self-care mobile application “Moral Injury Coach”.

Please find the Ukrainian version of Moral Injury Symptoms Scale-Short Form (MISS-SF) in:

Zasiekina, L., & Kozihora, M. . (2022). Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Psychometric Properties of Moral Injury Symptoms Scale. Psychological Prospects Journal, 39, 139–152. https://doi.org/10.29038/2227-1376-2022-39-zas

 

Funding: The project is funded by Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, 0122U000945 (2022-2025).


Moral injury

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Instruments to assess moral injury 

Morally injurious events

  • Moral Injury Events Scale (MIES)

9-items, freely available in English, Dutch

The MIES is a concise 9-item scale investigating exposure to potentially morally injurious events either perpetrated or witnessed by the individual, and betrayal experiences. Respondents are asked to indicate their level of agreement with each statement on the 9-item scale. Initially developed for veterans, the MIES has been subsequently adapted for use with civilian populations (Nash et al., 2013; Thomas et al., 2023).

Morally injurious events + moral injury sequelae

  • The Moral Injury and Distress Scale (MIDS)

18 items, English, available here

The MIDS offers a comprehensive evaluation of the emotional, cognitive, spiritual, social, and/or behavioral consequences stemming from potentially morally injurious events. Respondents are first asked to identify one or more events in which they were bothered by something that they did, failed to do, or witnessed and that transgressed their moral beliefs. If participants endorse the occurrence of such events, they respond an 18-item questionnaire measuring the intensity of morally injurious sequelae. The MIDS (in English) was validated among veterans, healthcare workers, and first responders (Norman et al., 2023).

  • The Occupational Moral Injury Scale (OMIS) 

20 items, English, available here 

The OMIS is a 20-item measure of moral injury experiences in occupational settings. The OMIS is generalised enough in its wording to allow use across any occupational setting, without the requirement for alteration. The OMIS assesses five kinds of morally injurious events (MIEs; commission with agency, commission under duress, acts of omission, witnessing and betrayal) in addition to five primary markers of moral injury (guilt, shame, anger, loss of trust, existential conflict), applying a bifactor model structure to do so. Respondents are asked to rate on a 7-point likert scale how much they agree or disagree with 20 statements describing difficult workplace experiences. Examples of some of the items include, “I’m angry because my workplace expects a lot from employees but doesn’t look after us in turn”, “Ignoring my conscience in order to do my job has made it hard for me to trust myself”, and “I feel guilty over things I’ve been made to do at work that I don’t morally agree with”. The OMIS was developed and validated among frontline health and first responder workers (Thomas et al., 2023).

Moral injury sequelae

  • The Moral Injury Symptom Scale – Health Professionals (MISS-HP)

10 items, English, freely available here

The MISS-HP is designed to assess the severity of moral injury symptoms specifically among healthcare workers. This 10-item questionnaire asks respondents to rate their level of agreement, on a scale from 1 to 10, with each statement. The MISS-HP covers various aspects of moral injury, including feelings of betrayal, guilt, shame, moral concerns, religious struggle, loss of religious or spiritual faith, loss of meaning or purpose, difficulty forgiving, loss of trust, and self-condemnation. The scale aims to provide insight into the specific challenges and psychological impact of moral injury experienced by healthcare professionals (Mantri et al., 2020).

  • Expressions of Moral Injury Scale (EMIS)

17 items, freely available in English, Dutch

The EMIS is a measure of moral injury-related outcomes through a 17-item scale. These items capture emotions, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors that reflect moral injury. The EMIS has two dimensions: Self-Directed moral injury and Other-Directed moral injury. The former focuses on the psychological distress experienced by individuals due to their own moral transgressions or perceived moral failures, while the latter pertains to the emotional and psychological distress resulting from witnessing or being exposed to moral transgressions committed by others. The original version of the EMIS was specifically designed to evaluate moral injury outcomes within military populations. Subsequently, it was adapted for application among civilian populations as well (Currier et al., 2018; Thomas et al., 2023a, 2023b).

References

  • Coimbra, B. M., Zylberstajn, C., van Zuiden, M., Hoeboer, C. M., Mello, A. F., Mello, M. F., & Olff, M. (2024). Moral injury and mental health among health-care workers during the COVID-19 pandemic: Meta-analysis. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 15(1), 2299659. https://doi.org/10.1080/20008066.2023.2299659

  • Currier, J. M., Farnsworth, J. K., Drescher, K. D., McDermott, R. C., Sims, B. M., & Albright, D. L. (2018). Development and evaluation of the Expressions of Moral Injury Scale-Military Version. Clinical psychology & psychotherapy, 25(3), 474–488. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2170

  • Griffin, B. J., Purcell, N., Burkman, K., Litz, B. T., Bryan, C. J., Schmitz, M., Villierme, C., Walsh, J., & Maguen, S. (2019). Moral Injury: An Integrative Review. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 32(3), 350-362. https://doi.org/10.1002/jts.22362

  • Litz, B. T., Stein, N., Delaney, E., Lebowitz, L., Nash, W. P., Silva, C., & Maguen, S. (2009). Moral injury and moral repair in war veterans: A preliminary model and intervention strategy. Clinical Psychology Review, 29(8), 695–706. 10.1016/j.cpr.2009.07.003

  • Mantri, S., Lawson, J. M., Wang, Z., & Koenig, H. G. (2020). Identifying Moral Injury in Healthcare Professionals: The Moral Injury Symptom Scale-HP. Journal of religion and health, 59(5), 2323–2340. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10943-020-01065-w

  • Nash, W. P., Marino Carper, T. L., Mills, M. A., Au, T., Goldsmith, A., & Litz, B. T. (2013). Psychometric evaluation of the Moral Injury Events Scale. Military medicine, 178(6), 646–652. https://doi.org/10.7205/MILMED-D-13-00017

  • Norman, S. B., Griffin, B. J., Pietrzak, R. H., McLean, C., Hamblen, J. L., & Maguen, S. (2023). The Moral Injury and Distress Scale: Psychometric evaluation and initial validation in three high-risk populations. Psychological trauma : theory, research, practice and policy, 10.1037/tra0001533. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1037/tra0001533

  • Ter Heide, F.J.J. & Olff, M. (2023). Widening the scope: defining and treating moral injury in diverse populations, European Journal of Psychotraumatology,  14:2, DOI: 10.1080/20008066.2023.2196899

  • Thomas, V., Bizumic, B., Cruwys, T., & Walsh, E. (2023a). Measuring civilian moral injury: Adaptation and validation of the Moral Injury Events Scale (Civilian) and Expressions of Moral Injury Scale (Civilian). Psychological trauma : theory, research, practice and policy, 10.1037/tra0001490. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1037/tra0001490

  • Thomas, V., Bizumic, B., & Quinn, S. (2023b, October 26). The Occupational Moral Injury Scale: Development and Validation in Frontline Health and First Responder Workers. Traumatology. Advance online publication. https://dx.doi.org/10.1037/trm0000482 - pdf

  • Zasiekina, L., Duchyminska, T., Bifulco, A., & Bignardi, G. (2023). War trauma impacts in Ukrainian combat and civilian populations: Moral injury and associated mental health symptoms. Military Psychology, 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1080/08995605.2023.2235256

  • Zasiekina, L., Kokun, O., Hlova, I., & Bojko, M. (2023). Defining conceptual boundaries of moral injury and post-traumatic stress disorder in military population: A systematic review. East European Journal of Psycholinguistics, 10 (1), 299-314. http://dx.doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2023.10.1.zas

  • Zasiekina, L., Zasiekin, S., & Kuperman, V. (2023). Post-traumatic stress disorder and moral injury among Ukrainian civilians during the ongoing war. Journal of Community Health, 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs10900-023-01225-5

  • Zasiekina, L., Kokun, O., Kozihora, M., Fedotova, T., Zhuravlova, O., & Bojko, M. (2022). A concept analysis of moral injury in Ukrainian National Guard service members’ narratives: A clinical case study. East European Journal of Psycholinguistics, 9(1), 296-314. https://doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2022.9.1.zas

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