ORCID
0000-0001-5503-7343
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-2019
DOI
10.1086/701838
Abstract
There is a vast academic literature on the moral dimensions and ethical dilemmas of what are commonly referred to as the helping professions (e.g., nursing, medicine, social work, counseling, teaching). Over the past several decades, increasing attention has been paid to the issue of moral transgressions perpetrated, witnessed, or experienced by these professionals and their accompanying psychological and social outcomes. Scholars seeking to understand moral transgressions and their effects have proposed and examined a variety of constructs, including moral distress, demoralization, and moral injury. This article examines to what extent constructs related to moral transgressions and their associated psychological, emotional, and social effects overlap and diverge to describe similar or distinct phenomena and proposes a unified conceptual model of moral suffering. Understanding the moral dimensions of the helping professions is critical for effective research and just, ethical practice.
Recommended Citation
Sugrue, Erin, "Understanding the Effect of Moral Transgressions in the Helping Professions: In Search of Conceptual Clarity" (2019). Faculty Authored Articles. 55.
https://idun.augsburg.edu/faculty_scholarship/55
Comments
This paper was published in the journal Social Service Review in March 2019. The published version can be found at https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/701838