Psychospiritual Developmental Risk Factors for Moral Injury Article

Full Text via DOI: 10.3390/rel11100484 Web of Science: 000586945000001
Open Access

Cited authors

  • Usset TJ, Gray E, Griffin BJ, Currier JM, Kopacz MS, Wilhelm JH, Harris JI

Abstract

  • There is increasing theoretical, clinical, and empirical support for the hypothesis that psychospiritual development, and more specifically, postconventional religious reasoning, may be related to moral injury. In this study, we assessed the contributions of exposure to potentially morally injurious events, posttraumatic stress symptoms, and psychospiritual development to moral injury symptoms in a sample of military veterans (N = 212). Psychospiritual development was measured as four dimensions, based on Wulff's theory juxtaposing conventional vs. postconventional levels of religious reasoning, with decisions to be an adherent or a disaffiliate of faith. After controlling for exposure to potentially morally injurious events and severity of posttraumatic stress symptoms, veterans who were conventional disaffiliates reported higher scores on the Moral Injury Questionnaire than conventional adherents, postconventional adherents, or postconventional disaffiliates. We conclude that the role of psychospiritual development offers a theoretical approach to moral injury that invites collaboration between social scientists, philosophers, theologians, and medical professionals.

Publication date

  • 2020

Number of pages

  • 11

Volume

  • 11

Issue

  • 10