Instances of Moral Distress in Medical Education: Recognition and Approaches
PAMELA JOFRÉ, RODRIGO VERGARA

TL;DR
This paper discusses moral distress in medical education and its impact on students and young professionals, emphasizing the need for strategies to address it.
Contribution
The paper highlights the role of hierarchies in causing moral distress and proposes approaches to mitigate its effects in medical education.
Findings
Moral distress in medical education is often caused by hierarchical pressures.
Ignoring moral distress can lead to long-term consequences like burnout and demotivation.
Addressing moral distress is crucial for maintaining professional satisfaction and ethical practice.
Abstract
The care of sick people is a moral issue. In a highly technological era, it risks becoming a matter of repairing unhealthy bodies by means of evidence-based strategies, neglecting the human component. To teach these issues has become a challenge and ignoring it has important consequences. Andrew Jameton described moral distress in medicine in 1984 as the negative feelings that arise when one feels compelled to act against what one considers morally correct. It is usually due to external or organizational circumstances, but in the case of health careers students , residents or young professionals, it is hierarchies that often impose themselves as a relevant factor, affecting the moral decisions the students would make if the case that such hierarchies did not exist. The issue is complex, because long-term consequences have been described, which have to do with exhaustion, disenchantment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEthics in medical practice · Innovations in Medical Education · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
