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      Mindful Ethical Practice and Resilience Academy: Equipping Nurses to Address Ethical Challenges

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          Abstract

          Background

          Ethical challenges in clinical practice significantly affect frontline nurses, leading to moral distress, burnout, and job dissatisfaction, which can undermine safety, quality, and compassionate care.

          Objectives

          To examine the impact of a longitudinal, experiential educational curriculum to enhance nurses’ skills in mindfulness, resilience, confidence, and competence to confront ethical challenges in clinical practice.

          Methods

          A prospective repeated-measures study was conducted before and after a curricular intervention at 2 hospitals in a large academic medical system. Intervention participants (192) and comparison participants (223) completed study instruments to assess the objectives.

          Results

          Mindfulness, ethical confidence, ethical competence, work engagement, and resilience increased significantly after the intervention. Resilience and mindfulness were positively correlated with moral competence and work engagement. As resilience and mindfulness improved, turnover intentions and burnout (emotional exhaustion and depersonalization) decreased. After the intervention, nurses reported significantly improved symptoms of depression and anger. The intervention was effective for intensive care unit and non–intensive care unit nurses (exception: emotional exhaustion) and for nurses with different years of experience (exception: turnover intentions).

          Conclusions

          Use of experiential discovery learning practices and high-fidelity simulation seems feasible and effective for enhancing nurses’ skills in addressing moral adversity in clinical practice by cultivating the components of moral resilience, which contributes to a healthy work environment, improved retention, and enhanced patient care.

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          Most cited references90

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          The benefits of being present: Mindfulness and its role in psychological well-being.

          Mindfulness is an attribute of consciousness long believed to promote well-being. This research provides a theoretical and empirical examination of the role of mindfulness in psychological well-being. The development and psychometric properties of the dispositional Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) are described. Correlational, quasi-experimental, and laboratory studies then show that the MAAS measures a unique quality of consciousness that is related to a variety of well-being constructs, that differentiates mindfulness practitioners from others, and that is associated with enhanced self-awareness. An experience-sampling study shows that both dispositional and state mindfulness predict self-regulated behavior and positive emotional states. Finally, a clinical intervention study with cancer patients demonstrates that increases in mindfulness over time relate to declines in mood disturbance and stress.
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            The measurement of experienced burnout

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              The brief resilience scale: assessing the ability to bounce back.

              While resilience has been defined as resistance to illness, adaptation, and thriving, the ability to bounce back or recover from stress is closest to its original meaning. Previous resilience measures assess resources that may promote resilience rather than recovery, resistance, adaptation, or thriving. To test a new brief resilience scale. The brief resilience scale (BRS) was created to assess the ability to bounce back or recover from stress. Its psychometric characteristics were examined in four samples, including two student samples and samples with cardiac and chronic pain patients. The BRS was reliable and measured as a unitary construct. It was predictably related to personal characteristics, social relations, coping, and health in all samples. It was negatively related to anxiety, depression, negative affect, and physical symptoms when other resilience measures and optimism, social support, and Type D personality (high negative affect and high social inhibition) were controlled. There were large differences in BRS scores between cardiac patients with and without Type D and women with and without fibromyalgia. The BRS is a reliable means of assessing resilience as the ability to bounce back or recover from stress and may provide unique and important information about people coping with health-related stressors.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Critical Care
                AACN Publishing
                1062-3264
                1937-710X
                January 01 2021
                January 01 2021
                : 30
                : 1
                : e1-e11
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Cynda Hylton Rushton is the Anne and George L. Bunting Professor of Clinical Ethics at Berman Institute of Bioethics and a professor of nursing and pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
                [2 ]Sandra M. Swoboda is the Department of Surgery research program coordinator and prelicensure masters entry program simulation coordinator/educator, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and School of Medicine.
                [3 ]Nancy Reller is president of Sojourn Communications, McLean, Virginia.
                [4 ]Kimberly A. Skarupski is associate dean for faculty development at the School of Medicine, associate professor in the Division of Geriatric Medicine and Gerontology, and associate professor of epidemiology at Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University.
                [5 ]Michelle Prizzi is research and educational program coordinator at Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University.
                [6 ]Peter D. Young is a DPhil candidate in population health at Ethox Centre and Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities, University of Oxford, England.
                [7 ]Ginger C. Hanson is an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins School of Nursing.
                Article
                10.4037/ajcc2021359
                33385208
                bbc76103-ab31-4233-9f43-6babc47e8b6d
                © 2021
                History

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