Date of Award
May 2021
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Department
Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Committee Member
Thomas W Britt
Committee Member
Robert Sinclair
Committee Member
Patrick Rosopa
Committee Member
Cynthia Pury
Abstract
Moral suffering occurs when employees feel constrained by organizational factors that are perceived as conflicting with their values. Moral suffering has been conceptualized through moral distress and moral injury, and while both terms have conceptually similar definitions, no study to date has empirically examined the distinction between the constructs. Thus, the current study examined the distinction between moral injury and moral distress, and whether perceived occupational stigma was a moderator of the relationship between moral suffering and mental health symptoms, meaningful work, and counterproductive work behaviors. Participants were 479 adults from 20 industries, who were recruited from Mturk to participate in the study at two time points. Results from the measurement model indicated a two-factor structure of witness- and perpetration-based moral suffering. The structural equation models indicated that witness-based moral suffering uniquely predicted higher mental health symptoms and lower meaningful work, while perpetration-based moral suffering predicted higher counterproductive work behaviors. The interactions between moral suffering and perceived occupational stigma predicting the outcomes exhibited evidence of suppression. The findings demonstrate that prior research may not be capturing the full domain of moral suffering by examining moral injury and moral distress separately. Results showed that both witness- and perpetration-based moral suffering predicted different factors that contribute to an individual’s wellbeing.
Recommended Citation
Wilson, Chloe A., "Trauma or Trapped: Conceptualizing Moral Suffering and the Impact of Occupational Stigma" (2021). All Dissertations. 2762.
https://open.clemson.edu/all_dissertations/2762