Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research

The need for research to advance scientific understanding must be balanced with ensuring the rights and wellbeing of participants are safeguarded, with some research topics posing more ethical quandaries for researchers than others. Moral injury is one such topic. Exposure to potentially morally inj...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Victoria Williamson, Dominic Murphy, Carl Castro, Eric Vermetten, Rakesh Jetly, Neil Greenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-04-01
Series:Research Ethics Review
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1747016120969743
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spelling doaj-8c185d1464d84f58a4c904879f2ecc1a2021-04-13T21:34:31ZengSAGE PublishingResearch Ethics Review1747-01612047-60942021-04-011710.1177/1747016120969743Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible researchVictoria WilliamsonDominic MurphyCarl CastroEric VermettenRakesh JetlyNeil GreenbergThe need for research to advance scientific understanding must be balanced with ensuring the rights and wellbeing of participants are safeguarded, with some research topics posing more ethical quandaries for researchers than others. Moral injury is one such topic. Exposure to potentially morally injurious experiences can lead to significant distress, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and selfinjury. In this article, we discuss how the rapid expansion of research in the field of moral injury could threaten the wellbeing, dignity and integrity of participants. We also examine key guidance for carrying out ethically responsible research with participants’ rights to self-determination, confidentiality, non-maleficence and beneficence discussed in relation to the study of moral injury. We describe how investigations of moral injury are likely to pose several challenges for researchers including managing disclosures of potentially illegal acts, the risk of harm that repeated questioning about guilt and shame may pose to participant wellbeing in longitudinal studies, as well as the possible negative impact of exposure to vicarious trauma on researchers themselves. Finally, we offer several practical recommendations that researchers, research ethics committees and other regulatory bodies can take to protect participant rights, maximise the potential benefits of research outputs and ensure the field continues to expand in an ethically responsible way.https://doi.org/10.1177/1747016120969743
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Victoria Williamson
Dominic Murphy
Carl Castro
Eric Vermetten
Rakesh Jetly
Neil Greenberg
spellingShingle Victoria Williamson
Dominic Murphy
Carl Castro
Eric Vermetten
Rakesh Jetly
Neil Greenberg
Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
Research Ethics Review
author_facet Victoria Williamson
Dominic Murphy
Carl Castro
Eric Vermetten
Rakesh Jetly
Neil Greenberg
author_sort Victoria Williamson
title Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
title_short Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
title_full Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
title_fullStr Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
title_full_unstemmed Moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
title_sort moral injury and the need to carry out ethically responsible research
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research Ethics Review
issn 1747-0161
2047-6094
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The need for research to advance scientific understanding must be balanced with ensuring the rights and wellbeing of participants are safeguarded, with some research topics posing more ethical quandaries for researchers than others. Moral injury is one such topic. Exposure to potentially morally injurious experiences can lead to significant distress, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and selfinjury. In this article, we discuss how the rapid expansion of research in the field of moral injury could threaten the wellbeing, dignity and integrity of participants. We also examine key guidance for carrying out ethically responsible research with participants’ rights to self-determination, confidentiality, non-maleficence and beneficence discussed in relation to the study of moral injury. We describe how investigations of moral injury are likely to pose several challenges for researchers including managing disclosures of potentially illegal acts, the risk of harm that repeated questioning about guilt and shame may pose to participant wellbeing in longitudinal studies, as well as the possible negative impact of exposure to vicarious trauma on researchers themselves. Finally, we offer several practical recommendations that researchers, research ethics committees and other regulatory bodies can take to protect participant rights, maximise the potential benefits of research outputs and ensure the field continues to expand in an ethically responsible way.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1747016120969743
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