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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

STATNews: Moral injury and burnout in medicine: a year of lessons learned

When we began exploring the concept of moral injury to explain the deep distress that U.S. health care professionals feel today, it was something of a thought experiment aimed at erasing the preconceived notions of what was driving the disillusionment of so many of our colleagues in a field they had worked so hard to join.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

JPRM: Hard Hits of Distress

Physicians took two hard hits in May 2019. The first: the WHO will include a more detailed description of burnout as an occupational phenomenon in the International Classification of Diseases-11. The second: physician burnout costs the healthcare system $4.6 billion each year.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

Medscape: COVID-19 Is Making Moral Injury to Physicians Much Worse

Moral injury is also coming to the forefront as physicians consider rationing scarce resources with too little guidance. Which surgeries truly justify use of increasingly scarce PPE? A cardiac valve replacement? A lumpectomy? Repairing a torn ligament? Dr. Dean explores these questions in the latest piece for Medscape entitled: COVID-19 Is Making Moral Injury to Physicians Much Worse.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

WBUR: The Real Epidemic: Not Burnout But ‘Moral Injury’ Of Doctors Unable To Do Right By Patients

I watched, horror-stricken and helpless, as my husband tried very hard to die.

He was not yet 50, but during one desperate winter night in a small hospital’s intensive care unit, I held his hand as, in staccato bursts between gasps of breath, he planned his funeral, grieved for the future he would not see with our two young boys, and implored me to remarry.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

British Medical Journal: Autonomy, mastery, respect, and fulfillment are key to avoiding moral injury in physicians

Moral injury occurs when the basic elements of the medical profession are eroded, say Simon G Talbot and Wendy Dean. But how to avoid moral injury in physicians?

In July 2018, the physicians wrote an article that reframed clinician distress as moral injury, rather than burnout. In our view, “burnout” suggests a lack of resilience on the part of clinicians, implying that better self-care will resolve our distress, whereas “moral injury” more accurately locates the source of distress in a conflict ridden healthcare system.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

AORN: How Doctors and Nurses Can Team Up to Fight Moral Injury in Healthcare

At a recent national meeting of perioperative nurses, more than 80% of audience respondents who reported feeling distressed endorsed the term “moral injury,” rather than “burnout,” in an informal poll. No segment of healthcare has a corner on distress. We are all suffering. We must Team Up to Fight Moral Injury!

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

Federal Practitioner: Reframing Clinician Distress: Moral Injury Not Burnout

For more than a decade, the term burnout has been used to describe clinician distress. Although some clinicians in federal health care systems may be protected from some of the drivers of burnout, other federal practitioners suffer from rule-driven health care practices and distant, top-down administration. Reframing Clinician Distress: Moral Injury Not Burnout – our thoughts in the link below.

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Emily Zebel Emily Zebel

Medical Economics: Time to retire the “patient consumer”

When the patient is a consumer there is a shift in the implied power dynamic. Rather than presenting to the physician seeking his or her expert advice and counsel, the interaction becomes a transactional one in which the physician provides a service and the patient pays for it. In this type of dynamic, the patient-customer is “never wrong,” according to Cesar Ritz’s well-known edict, broadly adopted in the hospitality industry.

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Publications Emily Zebel Publications Emily Zebel

STATNews: Physicians aren’t ‘burning out.’ They’re suffering from moral injury.

Wendy Dean, MD, and Simon Talbot, MD, explore the origin of physician distress with their landmark article on Moral Injury, Physicians aren’t ‘burning out.’ They’re suffering from moral injury.

Moral injury is frequently mischaracterized. In combat veterans it is diagnosed as post-traumatic stress; among physicians it’s portrayed as burnout. But without understanding the critical difference between burnout and moral injury, the wounds will never heal and physicians and patients alike will continue to suffer the consequences.

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