Covid and the pandemic of moral injury
As the dust begins to settle on covid, we're in a better position to reflect on past events which may prove challenging for some.
The term moral injury is a new one for me as it probably is for most, perhaps not surprisingly because it’s more commonly applied in a military context and only more recently in health and social care; since 2020 to be precise. Indeed, the literature gently, knowingly or unknowingly, nudges us into believing that moral injury, reframed as occupational moral injury, isn’t a new concept but an inevitable consequence of working in an ethically challenging health and social care system.
Moral injury is understood as the damage done to an individual’s conscience or moral compass when they perpetrate, witness or fail to prevent acts that transgress their own moral beliefs, values or code of ethics. The term is thought to have originated after the Vietnam war when returning veterans and their carers struggled to make sense of high levels of anguish, anger and alienation that couldn’t be explained in terms of a mental health diagnosis such a Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. It doesn’t take much stretch of the imagination to understand why veterans were morally injured but the Moral Injury Project at Syracuse University cites examples such as using deadly force in combat and inadvertently causing harm or death to civilians and colleagues, giving orders that result in the injury or death of colleagues, failing to provide medical aid to civilians or colleagues and failing to report situations such as sexual assaults.
When lockdowns were implemented in 2020, the health and social care workforce faced insurmountable and intolerable challenges when it was deemed unsafe in many situations to have close contact with fellow human beings who were in need of assistance. In essence, a workforce that functions on the need for human contact could in fact endanger life by simply doing their job. Subsequently, care and support was withdrawn or compromised through almost non existent face to face interactions or time limited with minimal physical contact if they took place at all.
Moral injury therefore makes sense in the context of health and social care. Staff were forced to deny medical and compassionate care to the injured and dying, leave adults and children in risky situations that in some cases lead to death and injury, isolate frail older people from the life giving company of family and friends and ignore or dismiss situations that previously justified urgent attention; all done while hiding smiles and humanity behind useless and potentially dangerous masks.
Moral injury isn’t unique to veterans and the health and social care workforce and can surely be applied across most professions and indeed the population; the police officer investigating a peaceful family gathering, the funeral director separating distressed relatives, the religious leader closing the door of a place of worship or the teachers who forced children to wear masks for hours on end. There were also the children who isolated their parents and parents who isolated their children, neighbours and community groups who withdrew essential help and support and friends and family who got angry or fell out with those they disagreed with? Emotions and tensions ran high and leads me to think that many of us are morally injured to some degree or another? Is it no wonder that so many are struggling with poor mental health?
The growing number of articles drawing attention to moral injury, the most significant in the BMJ in July 2020 and a reference point for further articles, all focus on reassuring staff that a conflict of morals and the potential for injury is a normal consequence of doing what was necessary to prevent illness and death from covid-19. Staff are commended in a Sage paper for risking their own health by breaking the rules to offer compassionate and timely care alongside those who followed the rules at the expense of their moral and professional judgement, even when their inaction resulted in leaving children and adults in risky situations. At no point are the logic and morality of the rules called into question, which is surprising because the Moral Injury Project makes reference to two other potential causes of moral injury that are not referred to in recent literature:
“Following orders that were illegal, immoral, and/or against the Rules of Engagement or Geneva Convention’ and
“A change in belief about the necessity or justification for war, during or after one’s service.”
As the realisation slowly dawns on the world that the inhumane actions that staff were forced to take were in fact unnecessary and based on flawed concepts with no robust evidence base; are we facing a rising tide of the morally injured? All measures were applied in the absence of risk benefit analysis, despite common knowledge that blanket approaches to risk assessment and management are likely to cause more damage than the presenting risk. Yet, the whole population was terrified into believing we were all at equal risk of severe illness or death from a lethal virus, to which we had no natural immunity and was quietly spread from those with no symptoms, especially children. Therefore, lockdowns, school closures, testing, mask wearing, social distancing, vaccinations and subsequent passports, were considered necessary but in reality were unjustified and immoral. Dismissing the question of the necessity and morality of these measures and normalising moral injury as a natural consequence of a war like situation, places accountability solely on those who enforced the polices and vindicates those who created them.
Covid-19 could have been managed with compassion and kindness, allowing us to emerge from this crisis with our morals intact, as suggested for example by The Great Barrington Declaration with close to a million signatures. However, a culture of fear and censorship of anyone who challenged the prevailing narrative, ensured that thousands of professionals and some of the world’s most eminent experts who argued for an evidence based and balanced approach to covid-19, were silenced and hidden from public view.
A morally injured workforce is evidence that the response to covid-19 was morally wrong. None of us know how we would have behaved in the shoes of the workers who enforced immoral policies that contravened their conscience and moral compass but we can be sure of one thing; many of them have inadvertently played a part in injuring some of the very people they intended to protect.
This is a really thoughtful reflection and I think much nearer the mark than many of the published articles about moral injury, which for me always seem to skirt around the more unpalatable aspects underlying this phenomenon. I had not come across the term moral injury until 2020. I think a related concept is moral blindness. What differentiates moral injury from guilt?
I'm not sure about the BMJ authors suggestion that moral injury arises in part from healthcare workers sacrificing their/their own loved ones needs/preferences for those of strangers/wider society. This certainly would generate complex feelings, but not all negative.
I wondered if moral injury might partly explain why some vocal healthcare workers on social media appeared to project their anger by blaming various real or imagined categories of dangerous 'other' (lockdown skeptics, anti-maskers, covidiots, anti-vaxxers, fringe scientists) for the perpetuation of the pandemic. The longer the harmful policies were enacted, the more difficult it was to justify them even to themselves, but no-one had the courage to stop doing the things they believed had kept people safe.
You summarise the crux of the issue well with the sentence 'a morally injured workforce is evidence that the response to covid-19 was morally wrong.'