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Gender-Specific Features of the Lived Experience of Moral Distress. Debra R. Hanna, PhD, RN Associate Professor Molloy College Rockville Centre, NY 11571. This study was funded through a Molloy College Faculty Scholarship Grant. Hanna’s Previous Work.
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Gender-Specific Features of the Lived Experience of Moral Distress Debra R. Hanna, PhD, RN Associate Professor Molloy College Rockville Centre, NY 11571
This study was funded through a Molloy College Faculty Scholarship Grant
Hanna’s Previous Work • 2004: State of Science: Moral Distress • Analyzed themes, strengths and limitations of published research (1984-2004) • 2005: Lived Experience of Moral Distress of Nurses who Assisted with Abortions • Identified 3 main types of moral distress • Hypothesized 2 other types of moral distress • Identified 5 properties of moral distress
Recommendations(2004/05) • Conduct research to understand gender differences, cultural patterns, or other population specific signs, symptoms and processes • Seek to affirm or modify Hanna’s proposed redefinition so that instruments useful for diagnosis and measurement could be developed
Study Purpose • To determine if gender-specific features of moral distress exist, and if so, to describe them
Method & Design • Modified phenomenological method • Enroll male & female former child protection workers (CPWs) • Analyze data in five realms • Compare female RNs & female CPWs • Compare female CPWs with male CPWs
Hanna’s Modifications • Examine the data in five realms: • Lived Body (Corporality) • Lived Space (Spatiality) • Lived Time (Temporality) • Lived Relationship (Relationality) • Lived Consciousness (Conscious Reflexivity)
Findings • Female CPW experience of moral distress is similar to Female RN experience • Females undergo changes in realms of Lived Body, Space & Relationship • Females engaged in solitary activities to enable reflection and processing the immediate harms of the experience of moral distress
Outcomes:Female Moral Distress • Women used self-protective measures to avoid additional harm from their experience of moral distress • Left their jobs • Set limits with certain job tasks • Changed career/life directions
Findings • Male CPW experience is different from Female CPW experience • Male lived body experience is similar to female experience in some aspects, but what differs is what an observer is able to observe
Findings • Men remained immersed in the experience and made efforts to right the wrongs • Men used stoic-heroic measures to manage the immediate harms of the experience of moral distress
Outcomes: Male Moral Distress • Men kept their jobs • Sought higher levels of education • Sought promotions to gain power to right the wrongs they saw • Men stayed immersed in the MD experience much longer than women
Similarities between men & women • All volunteers reported disruptions in sleep, appetite, increased anxiety • Most reported some type of gastrointestinal disturbance (nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea)
Similarities • Volunteers who were parents reported heighted worry about their own children
Areas of Differences • Physical Appearance • Intimate relationships • Details recalled (or not) • Career decisions • Long-term and short-term effects of moral distress
Interpretation of Findings Being able to detect the male experience of moral distress is much more difficult than detecting the female experience
Assessing Female MD • Physiological—Visceral discernment; sleep disruptions; negative changes in physical appearance • Psychological—Anxiety; depression • Sociological—reduced intimacy with spouse or partner; changes in work relationships
Assessing Male MD • Men are unlikely to display their experience (stoic) • Male MD is not easily seen by others • Male descriptions of MD experience are less detailed, factual, non-emotive
Next step for MD research • Determine how to assess an experience that does not look the same for men and women, that can’t be observed easily, and that won’t be reported
References • Hanna, D. R. (2004). Moral Distress: The State of the Science. Research and Theory for Nursing Practice, 18(1): 73-93. • Hanna, D. R. (2005). The Lived Experience of Moral Distress of Nurses who Assisted with Elective Abortions. Research and Theory for Nursing Practice, 19(1): 95-124.
Thank you. Thank you. Questions?