Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada (Nov 2023)

Canadian respiratory therapists who considered leaving their clinical position experienced elevated moral distress and adverse psychological and functional outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Andrea M. D’Alessandro-Lowe,
  • Kimberly Ritchie,
  • Andrea Brown,
  • Bethany Easterbrook,
  • Yuanxin Xue,
  • Mina Pichtikova,
  • Max Altman,
  • Isaac Beech,
  • Heather Millman,
  • Fatima Foster,
  • Kelly Hassall,
  • Yarden Levy,
  • David L. Streiner,
  • Fardous Hosseiny,
  • Sara Rodrigues,
  • Alexandra Heber,
  • Charlene O’Connor,
  • Hugo Schielke,
  • Ann Malain,
  • Randi E. McCabe,
  • Ruth A. Lanius,
  • Margaret C. McKinnon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24095/hpcdp.43.10/11.04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 10/11
pp. 460 – 471

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionRespiratory therapists (RTs) faced morally distressing situations throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, including working with limited resources and facilitating video calls for families of dying patients. Moral distress is associated with a host of adverse psychological and functional outcomes (e.g. depression, anxiety, symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD] and functional impairment) and consideration of position departure. The purpose of this study was to understand the impact of moral distress and its associated psychological and functional outcomes on consideration to leave a clinical position among Canadian RTs during the COVID-19 pandemic. MethodsCanadian RTs (N = 213) completed an online survey between February and June 2021. Basic demographic information (e.g. age, sex, gender) and psychometrically validated measures of moral distress, depression, anxiety, stress, PTSD, dissociation, functional impairment, resilience and adverse childhood experiences were collected. ResultsOne in four RTs reported considering leaving their position. RTs considering leaving reported elevated levels of moral distress and adverse psychological and functional outcomes compared to RTs not considering leaving. Over half (54.5%) of those considering leaving scored above the cut-off for potential diagnosis of PTSD. Previous consideration to leave a position and having left a position in the past each significantly increased the odds of currently considering leaving, along with system-related moral distress and symptoms of PTSD, but the contribution of these latter factors was small. ConclusionCanadian RTs considering leaving their position reported elevated levels of distress and adverse psychological and functional outcomes, yet these individual-level factors appear unlikely to be the primary factors underlying RTs’ consideration to leave, because their effects were small. Further research is required to identify broader, organizational factors that may contribute to consideration of position departure among Canadian RTs.