Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jul 2022)

Defining and Assessing the Syndrome of Moral Injury: Initial Findings of the Moral Injury Outcome Scale Consortium

  • Brett T. Litz,
  • Rachel A. Plouffe,
  • Anthony Nazarov,
  • Dominic Murphy,
  • Andrea Phelps,
  • Alanna Coady,
  • Stephanie A. Houle,
  • Lisa Dell,
  • Sheila Frankfurt,
  • Gadi Zerach,
  • Yossi Levi-Belz,
  • The Moral Injury Outcome Scale Consortium,
  • Andrea Ashbaugh,
  • Julie Yeterian,
  • Danielle Berke,
  • Jessica Carney,
  • Mackenzie Cummings,
  • Ruth Chartoff,
  • Stephanie Ellickson-Larew,
  • Breanna Grunthal,
  • Maya Bina N. Vannini,
  • Frank Weathers,
  • Luke Rusowicz-Orazem,
  • Patrick Smith,
  • Fardous Hosseiny,
  • Lisa King,
  • J. Don Richardson,
  • Alexandra McIntyre-Smith David Forbes,
  • Kim Jones,
  • Ellie Lawrence-Wood,
  • Kelsey Madden,
  • Kim Murray

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.923928
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs) entail acts of commission (e.g., cruelty, proscribed or prescribed violence) or omission (e.g., high stakes failure to protect others) and bearing witness (e.g., to grave inhumanity, to the gruesome aftermath of violence), or being the victim of others' acts of commission (e.g., high stakes trust violations) or omission (e.g., being the victim of grave individual or systemic failures to protect) that transgress deeply held beliefs and expectations about right and wrong. Although there is a proliferation of interest in moral injury (the outcome associated with exposure to PMIEs), there has been no operational definition of the putative syndrome and no standard assessment scheme or measure, which has hampered research and care in this area. We describe an international effort to define the syndrome of moral injury and develop and validate the Moral Injury Outcome Scale (MIOS) in three stages. To ensure content validity, in Stage I, we conducted interviews with service members, Veterans, and clinicians/Chaplains in each country, inquiring about the lasting impact of PMIEs. Qualitative analysis yielded six operational definitions of domains of impact of PMIEs and components within domains that establish the parameters of the moral injury syndrome. From the domain definitions, we derived an initial pool of scale items. Stage II entailed scale refinement using factor analytic methods, cross-national invariance testing, and internal consistency reliability analyses of an initial 34-item MIOS. A 14-item MIOS was invariant and reliable across countries and had two factors: Shame-Related (SR) and Trust-Violation-Related (TVR) Outcomes. In Stage III, MIOS total and subscale scores had strong convergent validity, and PMIE-endorsers had substantially higher MIOS scores vs. non-endorsers. We discuss and contextualize the results and describe research that is needed to substantiate these inaugural findings to further explore the validity of the MIOS and moral injury, in particular to examine discriminant and incremental validity.

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