4.4 Article

Meanings of troubled conscience in nursing homes: nurses' lived experience

Journal

NURSING ETHICS
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 20-31

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09697330221117261

Keywords

stress of conscience; moral agency; nursing homes; nursing; lived experience

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The troubled conscience among nurses and healthcare workers is a significant issue that can lead to moral distress, burnout, and attrition. Nurses in long-term care settings struggle with conflicting ideals and realities, feeling a drive to maintain accountability and moral integrity. The findings suggest that transparent discussions about professional values and welfare state intentions are important for nurses' occupational health and patient care.
Background: Troubled conscience among nurses and other healthcare workers represents a significant contributor to healthcare worker moral distress, burnout and attrition. While research in this area has examined critical care in hospitals, less knowledge has been obtained from long-term care contexts such as nursing homes, despite widely recognised challenges with regard to vulnerable patients, increasing workload and maintaining workforce sustainability among nurses. Objective: The aim of this study was to illuminate and interpret the meaning of the lived experience of troubled conscience among registered nurses (RNs) working in nursing homes. Research design: This qualitative research employed narrative interviews with eight nurses to obtain essential meanings of their lived experiences of troubled conscience. The interview texts were analysed using a phenomenological hermeneutic approach. Ethical considerations: Participation was voluntary, informed and was conducted with written consent. The Norwegian Centre for Research Data approved the data processing of personal data. Findings: The analysis uncovered two themes: (1) troubled conscience means abandoning ideals, with the subthemes: failing dependent patients; being disloyal to colleagues; being inadequate in the performance of work tasks and (2) troubled conscience means facing realities, with the subthemes: accepting being part of the system; responding to barriers. Discussion: Troubled conscience meant experiencing continuous and simmering tension between one's ideals and realities and feeling a drive to preserve accountability and one's moral integrity. Endangered ideals were often under cross-pressure and included humanistic values, professional values, working life values and the values of the organisation. Conclusion: Nurses' troubled conscience refers to a struggle, but also a force that plays out at various levels and arenas in long-term care. Openness and dialogue about how professional values and the welfare state's intentions can be realised within the given framework are important for individual nurses' occupational health as well as the quality of care provided to patients.

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