The Invisible Wound: An Integrative Review of Moral Distress in Critical Care and Oncology Nursing – Causes, Consequences, and Evidence-Based Coping Strategies

Tahani Nazal Naqaa Alshammari (1), Nashmeyah Hmadian Al Rashedy (2), Sabahah Saad Dabis Alazmi , Amnah Menwer Fayed Alrashidi (3), Abdulmajeed Mudhi Al Shammari (4), Reem Hamad Abdullah Alshammari (5), Lafi Menwer Lafi Alharbi (6), Sadun Fuhayd Sadun Almuhayfir (6), Ayman Fehaid S Almohifer (6), Bushra Ahmed Alabdullatif (7), Majedah Nayyaf Alotaibi (8), Faisal Abdulaziz Altayyar (9)
(1) Al-Qa'id Health Center, Hail, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(2)  Al-Muraydisiyah Health Center, Buraydah, Qassim, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(3) Al-Muraydisiyah Health Center, Buraydah, Al-Qassim, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(4) Hail Health Cluster , Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(5) Hail General Hospital , Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(6) King Khalid Hospital, Hail, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(7) Prince Mohammed Bin Abdulaziz Hospital, Riyadh, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(8) Ardah Hospital for Mental Health, Al-Kharj, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(9) Health Information Technician, King Khalid Hospital, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

Background: Moral distress, the psychological anguish experienced when one knows the right action to take but is constrained from taking it, is a pervasive and debilitating phenomenon in nursing. Nurses working in high-acuity environments, including Critical Care and Oncology, are at exceptional risk given the frequency of ethically complex decisions related to end-of-life care, the futility of treatment, and resource allocation. Aim: The purpose of this integrative review was to synthesize a decade of literature (2015-2024) focused on the unique causes and consequences of moral distress among Critical Care and Oncology nurses and to assess the effectiveness of evidence-based coping and mitigation strategies. Methods: A systematic search of five databases (CINAHL, PubMed, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science) was conducted, yielding peer-reviewed articles for final analysis following Whittemore and Knafl's methodology. Results: The analysis identified four primary causative domains: perceived futile care, institutional constraints, poor communication, and team dissonance. Consequences were categorized at the individual level-burnout, PTSD, turnover intent-and organizational level-compromised care and high turnover. Effective interventions were multi-level, ranging from individual-focused strategies of moral resilience training, mindfulness, and peer support to system-level initiatives such as ethics debriefings, unit-based ethics committees, and transformative leadership. Conclusion: Moral distress is not an individual failing but rather a symptom of systemic ethical conflict. Thus, a sustainable solution requires a dual-pronged approach that simultaneously fosters individual moral resilience and transforms organizational structure and cultures to support ethical practice. Proactive, system-wide initiatives are required to mitigate this "invisible wound" and to preserve the nursing workforce.

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Authors

Tahani Nazal Naqaa Alshammari
shammari2024@hotmail.com (Primary Contact)
Nashmeyah Hmadian Al Rashedy
Sabahah Saad Dabis Alazmi
Amnah Menwer Fayed Alrashidi
Abdulmajeed Mudhi Al Shammari
Reem Hamad Abdullah Alshammari
Lafi Menwer Lafi Alharbi
Sadun Fuhayd Sadun Almuhayfir
Ayman Fehaid S Almohifer
Bushra Ahmed Alabdullatif
Majedah Nayyaf Alotaibi
Faisal Abdulaziz Altayyar
Alshammari, T. N. N., Nashmeyah Hmadian Al Rashedy, Sabahah Saad Dabis Alazmi, Amnah Menwer Fayed Alrashidi, Abdulmajeed Mudhi Al Shammari, Reem Hamad Abdullah Alshammari, … Faisal Abdulaziz Altayyar. (2024). The Invisible Wound: An Integrative Review of Moral Distress in Critical Care and Oncology Nursing – Causes, Consequences, and Evidence-Based Coping Strategies. Saudi Journal of Medicine and Public Health, 1(2), 779–785. https://doi.org/10.64483/20242204

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