| Literature DB >> 30568605 |
Lindsay B Carey1, Timothy J Hodgson2.
Abstract
Moral injury is a complex trauma related syndrome involving a correlation of biological, psychological, social, and spiritual symptoms that can have substantial impact upon health and well-being. This paper argues for a holistic bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach to moral injury, by including chaplaincy in the screening and treatment of moral injury among actively serving military members and retired veterans. As part of the moral injury treatment process, and in alignment with the World Health Organization's Spiritual Intervention Codings, a new technique is proposed, "Pastoral Narrative Disclosure" (PND), as a guide for chaplains and others trained in spiritual care to assist those suffering from moral injury.Entities:
Keywords: chaplains; holistic care; moral injury; public health; rehabilitation; religion; spiritual care
Year: 2018 PMID: 30568605 PMCID: PMC6290645 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
WHO spiritual care intervention codings (“WHO-SPICs”).
Summary Table developed from: (i) Australian Consortium for Classification Development (ACCD) (.
IBN, Intervention Block Number;
Tabular listings previously classifying “pastoral care” or “religious” interventions are now indexed under the above “spiritual care” procedural codes.
Moral injury—Bio-psycho-social-spiritual symptoms.
|
Insomnia “Startle-reflex” Alcohol abuse Drug addiction Loss of memory Self-sabotage / Self-harm Suicide |
Anger & Betrayal Shame, Guilt, Sorrow Loss of trust in self Loss of trust in others Fear and Anxiety Re-experiencing the moral conflict/Flashbacks Nightmares Gambling addition Sexual/Porn Addiction Self-deprecation Loss of self-worth Depression Suicidal ideation |
Spousal/Partner Disconnection Child-Parent Disconnection Family Disconnection Collegial Disconnection Occupational dysfunction Professional Disconnection Legal and disciplinary issues Community/Cultural Disconnection Social Alienation |
Anger & Betrayal Shame, Guilt, Sorrow Loss of trust in self Loss of trust in others Loss of faith/ belief Moral pain /dissonance Questioning morality Self-condemnation Spiritual/existential crisis Loss of purpose in life Fatalism Loss of caring Ontological loss of meaning. Feeling “haunted” |
Source:
Hodgson and Carey (.
Examples of moral injury spiritual screening tools accessible/utilized by chaplains.
| Spiritual injury scale/index ( |
Guilt Anger or resentment Grief or sadness Lack of meaning or purpose Despair or hopelessness |
Feeling that God/life abandoned Religious doubt or disbelief Fear of death |
Mental Health Spiritual Injury Moral Injury |
| Impact of Event Scale—Revised (IES-R) |
Traumatic Events Intrusion into life |
Hyper-arousal Avoidance |
Mental health Military & veterans PTSD/Moral injury Health & emergency service personnel |
| Moral Injury Events Scale (MIES) |
Betrayal Morality |
Immorality Ethics |
Mental health Military & veterans PTSD/Moral injury |
| Spiritual Distress Scale |
Guilt Sadness/grief Resentment |
Anger/ Despair/hopelessness |
Mental Health Military & Veterans PTSD/Moral Injury Suicide |
| Moral Injury Questionnaire—Military (MIQM) ( |
Betrayal Guilt Retribution Humanization |
Violence Destruction Death |
Mental Health Military & Veterans PTSD/Moral Injury |
| Modified Military Moral Injury Questionnaire (M3IQ) |
Immoral acts (witnessed and/or perpetrated) Death/injury (civilians, military, enemy) Betrayal (self & others) |
Ethical dilemmas (decision-making, humanization) Disproportional violence/retribution Grief, shame and unresolved issues |
Moral injury Existential/spiritual Ethics/morality Military & veterans |
| Moral Injury Symptoms Scale—Military (MISS-M) |
Betrayal Guilt Shame Moral concerns Religious struggles |
Trust Meaning/purpose Forgiveness Self-condemnation |
Mental Health PTSD Moral Injury Military & Veterans |
Instruments presented in chronological order (a)(29) developed from (24) Spiritual Injury Scale;
M3IQ: Based on the MIES (.
Pastoral narrative disclosure (PND)—Eight stage summary for the spiritual counseling and education of personnel experiencing moral injury.
| 1. Rapport | Developing rapport/trust between personnel/service member and chaplain, who ensures (caveats permitting) absolute confidentiality. |
| 2. Reflection | Personnel/service member provides an account either oral, written or by other medium, reflecting upon operational life journey and their morally injurious experience. |
| 3. Review | Indepth review of personnel/service member's reflection regarding their morally injurious experience by examination of conscience—considering past thoughts, words, actions, and omissions, particularly with regard to self-accusation/s. |
| 4. Reconstruction | Reconstruct the moral/ethical issue relating to the event and address feelings of grief, guilt, shame, anger, betrayal, trust, and forgiveness. |
| 5. Restoration | Restoration is sought regarding grievances, which if possible, are heard by the perpetrator or organizational representative. |
| 6. Ritual | Rituals, either formal or informal, secular or religious rites, expressing regret, naming mistakes, change of heart, and seeking self-forgiveness and/or forgiveness from a significant or sacred source. |
| 7. Renewal | Engaging in renewal by personnel/service member making amends and doing activities that are meaningful/purposeful in life by relinking with family, friends, workplace, community, the sacred/divine/God. |
| 8. Reconnection | Reconnection involves personnel/service member engaging support and resources to reconsider or implement future values, career plans and personal goals relevant for themselves and significant others so as to develop resilience and sustain themselves long term. |
Source: Carey and Hodgson, this paper;
WHO-ICD-10-AM Spiritual Intervention Coding “Spiritual Counseling and Education” (refer Table .