Using the Moral Injury and Distress Scale to identify clinically meaningful moral injury

Author:

Maguen Shira12,Griffin Brandon J.34,Pietrzak Robert H.56,McLean Carmen P.78ORCID,Hamblen Jessica L.910ORCID,Norman Sonya B.1011ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Mental Health Services San Francisco VA Health Care System San Francisco California USA

2. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences University of California San Francisco School of Medicine San Francisco California USA

3. Center for Mental Health Care and Outcomes Research Central Arkansas VA Little Rock Arkansas USA

4. Psychiatric Research Institute University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Little Rock Arkansas USA

5. Clinical Neurosciences Division, National Center for PTSD VA Connecticut Healthcare System West Haven Connecticut USA

6. Department of Psychiatry Yale School of Medicine West Haven Connecticut USA

7. Dissemination and Training Division National Center for PTSD Menlo Park California USA

8. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

9. Department of Psychiatry Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth Hanover New Hampshire USA

10. Executive Division National Center for PTSD White River Junction Vermont USA

11. Department of Psychiatry University of California San Diego School of Medicine La Jolla California USA

Abstract

AbstractDespite the proliferation of moral injury studies, a remaining gap is distinguishing moral injury from normative distress following exposure to potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs). Our goal was to leverage mental health and functional measures to identify clinically meaningful and functionally impairing moral injury using the Moral Injury and Distress Scale (MIDS). Participants who endorsed PMIE exposure (N = 645) were drawn from a population‐based sample of military veterans, health care workers, and first responders. Using signal detection methods, we identified the optimally efficient MIDS score for detecting clinically significant posttraumatic stress and depressive symptom severity, trauma‐related guilt, and functional impairment. The most efficient cut scores across outcomes converged between 24 and 27. We recommend a cut score of 27 given that roughly 70% of participants who screened positive on the MIDS at this threshold reported clinically significant mental health symptoms, and approximately 50% reported severe trauma‐related guilt and/or functional impairment. Overall, 10.2% of respondents exposed to a PMIE screened positive for moral injury at this threshold, particularly those who identified as a member of a minoritized racial or ethnic group (17.9%) relative to those who identified as White, non‐Hispanic (8.0%), aOR = 2.52, 95% CI [1.45, 4.42]. This is the first known study to establish a cut score indicative of clinically meaningful and impairing moral injury. Such scores may enhance clinicians’ abilities to conduct measurement‐based moral injury care by enabling them to identify individuals at risk of negative outcomes and better understand risk and protective factors for moral injury.

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. What Is Moral Injury?;Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics;2024-08-29

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