ABSTRACT

The rise of suicide and burnout among physicians has brought a new disease to the healthcare provider, which we previously thought only affected the soldier: moral distress syndrome, second only to moral injury.

In this book we introduce the concept of moral distress syndrome, which includes any or all of the following: depression, PTSD, risk of suicide, divorce, emotional detachment, and the inability to build healthy relationships and empathy.

While veterans can report to veteran hospitals for treatment, the physician cannot find treatment or support without fear of losing their license, their hospital privileges, and their job. Therefore, they are stuck dealing with the issue themselves, along with their family or their circle of friends.

To raise decisive awareness of the problems related to moral distress, we wrote this book.

This book is designed around physicians talking to other physicians about their moral distresses in a safe space. It brings all the aspects of the moral distress syndrome in a format familiar to the physician: grand rounds with a magistral lecture, where the audience asks the question and directly participates on the subject. The reader will feel like part of the audience and may want to ask their own questions as the book progresses.

The format of the book is divided into three parts.

In the first part, the research, data, and a crude number of problems are given: moral distress syndrome, PTSD, burnout, suicide, divorce rates, emotional detachment, legal distress syndrome, physicians leaving medicine, and the feeling of being a hamster in a wheel.

In the second part, we embellish on real life experiences of physicians to highlight the pain and depth of the moral distress they feel. We share stories around the character—their family, love life, divorce, etc.—to show the individual person behind the doctor.

In the third part, we focus on society and physician suffering and the birth of moral distress. This part focuses on the physician’s empathy as a way to point out his problems, weaknesses, and issues, and find possible solutions for him and other physicians facing the same issues. At the end of the third part, we discuss how it is the responsibility of physicians, patients, and society as a whole to heal in the face of moral injury, as recommended by the American Medical Association. We finish with the search for good friends and safe spaces, the cornerstones for the healing process.

Structure of the Chapters.

To make it easier to follow the material, at the beginning of each chapter we outline the points discussed, as a speaker outlines the material, summarizing it in the first slide of each topic. We hope that this way the readers can focus on the issues quickly throughout the book.

This book is formatted as a business novel and therefore the characters and situations are drawn from liberally. As well as reading like a novel, the reader can read each chapter separately and still understand the points.

part 1|104 pages

The Issues Fueling Moral Distress Syndrome

chapter Chapter 1|6 pages

Two Old Friends

chapter Chapter 2|8 pages

The Grand Round Lecture

chapter Chapter 3|6 pages

Litigation Syndrome

chapter Chapter 4|8 pages

Burnout

chapter Chapter 6|7 pages

Why Have Physicians Suffered a Lack of Recognition?

chapter Chapter 7|6 pages

Can Malpractice Claims Create Permanent Injury?

chapter Chapter 8|6 pages

Why Is Medicine Burning Out Physicians?

chapter Chapter 9|8 pages

Broken Systems and Culture

chapter Chapter 10|4 pages

Physicians Leaving Medicine

chapter Chapter 12|6 pages

Emotional Trauma: Brain Zapping and Concussion

chapter Chapter 13|8 pages

Divorce among Physicians

chapter Chapter 14|8 pages

Medical Malpractice Insurance Crisis

chapter Chapter 15|8 pages

The Opioid Crisis and Relief

part 2|30 pages

The Doctor, the Person

chapter Chapter 16|6 pages

Training Hurdles

chapter Chapter 17|4 pages

Double Residencies

chapter Chapter 18|8 pages

How Medicine Can Ruin a Marriage

chapter Chapter 19|4 pages

The Legal Issues and Hollow Victory

part 3|65 pages

Society and the Suffering Physician

chapter Chapter 21|6 pages

Societal Responsibilities

chapter Chapter 22|4 pages

Emotional Detachment and Patients’ Responsibilities

chapter Chapter 23|6 pages

Do Patients Want to Participate in Their Care?

chapter Chapter 24|8 pages

It Is Challenging to Be a Physician

chapter Chapter 25|4 pages

The Loneliness of a Physician in Moral Distress

chapter Chapter 26|8 pages

Divorce as a Consequence of Moral Distress

chapter Chapter 27|6 pages

The Stress of a Lawsuit Breaks Families

chapter Chapter 28|8 pages

The Birth of Moral Distress: The Syndrome

chapter Chapter 29|4 pages

Do Physicians Suffer from Discrimination?

chapter Chapter 30|4 pages

American Medical Association (AMA) Directions

chapter Chapter 31|5 pages

Safe Space and Final Introspections