Moral Resilience
Cross-source consensus on Moral Resilience from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Benefits
Other
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Highlighted claims
- The study defined moral resilience as the capacity to sustain or restore integrity when facing moral complexity, confusion, distress, or setbacks. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis
- The conceptual model presented moral resilience as dynamic and iterative rather than fixed. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis
- Moral resilience depends on interdependent individual, relational, organisational, and environmental components. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis
- Moral resilience was treated as both an individual and systemic phenomenon shaped by personal, team, leadership, and organisational factors. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis
- Moral resilience requires action across individual, team, organisational, and system levels. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis
- Moral resilience can moderate the relationship between morally distressing events and moral distress. — Struggling to cope in an unknown realm: a qualitative study of moral resilience in frontline healthcare professionals in Swedish hospital wards during a pandemic crisis