Moral injury

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the idea

The lasting harm to a person's moral and spiritual life that follows from doing, failing to stop, witnessing, or being betrayed in acts that violate their deepest sense of right and wrong. It names a wound made of guilt, shame, and lost meaning rather than fear — which is why it is set apart from trauma rooted in threat to life, even though the two often overlap. The field carries an unsettled split between a narrower reading centred on betrayal by those in authority and a broader one that counts one's own actions and what one has seen.

The lasting psychological, moral, and spiritual damage caused by perpetrating, failing to prevent, witnessing, or being betrayed in the doing of acts that violate one's deepest sense of what is right. Two definitions sit on either side of the field's internal disagreement: the narrower Shay formulation (betrayal of what's right by someone who holds legitimate authority in a high-stakes situation) and the broader Litz formulation (perpetrating, failing to prevent, or bearing witness to acts that transgress deeply held moral beliefs and expectations). The two are sometimes treated as variants of the same construct and sometimes treated as importantly different things.

Etymology§

The phrase moral injury in its modern clinical sense is from the mid-1990s, used roughly contemporaneously by clinical psychiatrist Jonathan Shay in Achilles in Vietnam (1994) and Vietnam-veteran philosopher Camillo Mac Bica in his 1999 International Journal of Applied Philosophy essay. Shay's vocabulary draws on the Homeric thémis (what's right, the ordering of things) and the betrayal of it; Bica's draws on Aristotelian and Stoic moral psychology. The construct went through a major reformulation in 2009 with Brett Litz and colleagues' Clinical Psychology Review paper, which is the citation point for almost all subsequent clinical and healthcare research.

Moral injury is the construct that names the gap between what combat veterans, healthcare workers under impossible conditions, and other agents in morally fraught roles report experiencing, and what the diagnostic category PTSD captures. The argument of the field — across all its internal disagreements — is that PTSD is well-suited to fear-based, life-threat trauma but poorly-suited to the guilt, shame, betrayal, and loss-of-meaning that participants in morally compromising actions describe.

The field is structured by a series of distinctions. The first is between Shay's narrower definition, which centres on betrayal by legitimate authority (the soldier ordered into actions that violate what is right), and Litz's broader definition, which counts perpetration and witnessing as much as betrayal. The second is between the clinical discourse, which treats moral injury as something close to a syndrome to be measured and treated, and the theological/philosophical discourse, which treats it as a moral condition that calls for communal and ritual repair. The third is between the original military application and the healthcare extension, which dates to the 2018 DeanTalbot STAT News article and now constitutes a substantial sub-literature in its own right.

The field has its own internal critique — most articulately in Wiinikka-Lydon's philosophical work — about the risks of concept creep: the worry that a construct originally developed to name a particular kind of combat-leadership betrayal has been stretched to cover any work-context moral discomfort, with the cost that it loses the analytic edge that made it useful. The most useful entry to the literature reads Shay and Litz against each other before reading either alongside the secondary literature that tries to harmonise them.

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