moral distress

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A form of emotional or psychological distress that occurs when a person knows the ethically appropriate action to take but is prevented from acting due to external constraints, such as policy restrictions or an insufficiently powerful role.

Word forms

moral distress

Etymology

The term was first used in clinical nursing literature in the 1980s and first formally described by Andrew Jameton in 1984.

Related words

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