Chronic Moral Injury in the Medical Professions

In Dulce M. Redín, Garrett W. Potts & Omowumi Ogunyemi, MacIntyre and the Practice of Governing Institutions. Springer. pp. 107-122 (2025)
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Abstract

This chapter explores the impact of “bureaucratic individualism” and profit-centered models on the medical profession, specifically examining Chronic Moral Injury (CH-MI). Drawing on Alasdair MacIntyre’s philosophy and Farr Curlin and Christopher Tollefsen’s critique of the Provider of Services Model (PSM) in healthcare, we argue that the erosion of practical reason—a key element for pursuing excellence in the profession—has dire consequences. Within the PSM, the focus on consumerism and radical patient autonomy hampers medical professionals’ ability to make value-informed judgments, contributing to CH-MI and a crisis of purpose. The chapter calls for redefining healthcare models to prioritize human flourishing over corporate interests.

Author Profiles

Lily Abadal
University of South Florida

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