3 research outputs found
Moral distress in everyday nursing: hidden traces of power and resistance
To know the strategies of resistance adopted by nursing staff, facing situations of
moral distress, from an ethical perspective. Method: The authors conducted qualitative research
through semi-structured interviews, with fifteen nursing staff members of a university hospital
in the extreme south of Brazil, using textual discourse analysis and the theoretical reference of
Foucault. Results: Two categories were constructed: denial of oneself and the other - in which
one perceives that the nursing staff can perform actions that are governed predominantly by
immobility and conformism, avoiding confrontations with whoever represents power in situations
that provoke moral distress in them; possibility to care for oneself and for the other - in which
nursing workers in situations that provoke moral distress for them exercise power and endurance.
Conclusion: it was perceived that some professionals seem to use ethical coping strategies,
in order to ensure and preserve their professional values. However, often the choice of some
nursing professionals may be to relapse into immobility and the absence of building strategies
of endurance. This situation may represent their reduced exercise of power and insufficient
resistance in the face of ethical problems, contributing to the intensification of their invisibility in
the area of health