Okelana Bandele, Razi Amin, Ring David, Ramtin Sina
Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2025 Feb 1;483(2):217-224. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000003220. Epub 2024 Aug 7.
Moral dissonance is the psychological discomfort associated with a mismatch between our moral values and potentially immoral actions. For instance, to limit moral dissonance, surgeons must develop a rationale that the potential for benefit from performing surgery is meaningfully greater than the inherent harm of surgery. Moral dissonance can also occur when a patient or one's surgeon peers encourage surgery for a given problem, even when the evidence suggests limited or no benefit over other options. Clinicians may not realize the degree to which moral dissonance can be a source of diminished joy in practice. Uncovering potential sources of moral dissonance can help inform efforts to help clinicians enjoy their work.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: In a scenario-based experiment performed in an online survey format, we exposed musculoskeletal specialists to various types of patient and practice stressors to measure their association with moral dissonance and asked: (1) What factors are associated with the level of pressure surgeons feel to act contrary to the best evidence? (2) What factors are associated with the likelihood of offering surgery?
We performed a scenario-based experiment by inviting members of the Science of Variation Group (SOVG; an international collaborative of musculoskeletal surgeons that studies variation in care) to complete an online survey with randomized elements. The use of experimental techniques such as randomization to measure factors associated with specific ratings makes participation rate less important than diversity of opinion within the sample. A total of 114 SOVG musculoskeletal surgeons participated, which represents the typical number of participants from a total of about 200 who tend to participate in at least one experiment per year. Among the 114 participants, 94% (107) were men, 49% (56) practiced in the United States, and 82% (94) supervised trainees. Participants viewed 12 scenarios of upper extremity fractures for which surgery is optional (discretionary) based on consensus and current best evidence. In addition to a representative age, the scenario included randomized patient and practice factors that we posit could be sources of moral distress based on author consensus. Patient factors included potential sources of pressure (such as "The patient is convinced they want a specific treatment and will go to a different surgeon if they don't get it") or experiences of collaboration (such as "The patient is collaborative and involved in decisions"). Practice factors included circumstances of financial or reputational pressure (such as "The practice is putting pressure on you to generate more revenue") and factors of limited pressure (such as "Your income is not tied to revenue"). For each scenario, the participant was asked to rate both of the following statements on a scale from 0 to 100 anchored with "I don't feel it at all" at 0, "I feel it moderately" at 50, and "I feel it strongly" at 100: (1) pressure to act contrary to best evidence and (2) likelihood of offering surgery. Additional explanatory variables included surgeon factors: gender, years in practice, region, subspecialty, supervision of trainees, and practice setting (academic/nonacademic). We sought factors associated with pressure to act contrary to evidence and likelihood of offering surgery, accounting for potential confounding variables in multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models.
Accounting for potential confounding variables, greater pressure to act contrary to best evidence was moderately associated with greater patient despair (regression coefficient [RC] 6 [95% confidence interval 2 to 9]; p = 0.001) and stronger patient preference (RC 4 [95% CI 0 to 8]; p = 0.03). Lower pressure to act contrary to evidence was moderately associated with surgeon income independent of revenue (RC -6 [95% CI -9 to -4]; p < 0.001) and no financial benefit to operative treatment (RC -6 [95% CI -8 to -3]; p < 0.001). Marketing concerns were the only factor associated with greater likelihood of offering surgery (RC 6 [95% CI 0 to 11]; p = 0.04).
In this scenario-based survey experiment, patient distress and strong preferences and surgeon financial incentives were associated with greater surgeon feelings of moral dissonance when considering discretionary fracture surgery.
To support enjoyment of the practice of musculoskeletal surgery, we recommend that surgeons, surgery practices, and surgery professional associations be intentional in both anticipating and developing strategies to ameliorate potential sources of moral dissonance in daily practice.
道德失调是指我们的道德价值观与潜在的不道德行为之间不匹配所带来的心理不适。例如,为了减少道德失调,外科医生必须找到一种合理依据,即手术带来益处的可能性要显著大于手术本身固有的伤害。当患者或外科同行鼓励针对某一特定问题进行手术时,即使证据表明相比于其他选择,手术的益处有限或没有益处,道德失调也可能会出现。临床医生可能没有意识到道德失调在多大程度上会成为工作中幸福感降低的一个根源。找出潜在的道德失调根源有助于为帮助临床医生享受工作的努力提供信息。
问题/目的:在一项以在线调查形式进行的基于场景的实验中,我们让肌肉骨骼专科医生面对各种类型的患者和执业压力源,以测量它们与道德失调的关联,并提出以下问题:(1)哪些因素与外科医生感受到的违背最佳证据行事的压力水平相关?(2)哪些因素与提供手术的可能性相关?
我们通过邀请变异科学小组(SOVG;一个研究医疗差异的国际肌肉骨骼外科医生合作组织)的成员完成一项包含随机元素的在线调查,进行了一项基于场景的实验。使用随机化等实验技术来测量与特定评分相关的因素,使得参与率不如样本内意见的多样性重要。共有114名SOVG肌肉骨骼外科医生参与,这代表了每年约200名倾向于至少参与一项实验的参与者中的典型人数。在114名参与者中,94%(107名)为男性,49%(56名)在美国执业,82%(94名)指导实习生。参与者查看了12个上肢骨折的场景,根据共识和当前最佳证据,这些场景的手术是可选择的(酌情决定)。除了具有代表性的年龄外,场景还包括我们根据作者共识认为可能是道德困扰来源的随机患者和执业因素。患者因素包括潜在的压力源(如“患者坚信他们想要特定的治疗,如果得不到就会去找其他外科医生”)或合作经历(如“患者具有合作性并参与决策”)。执业因素包括财务或声誉压力情况(如“执业机构给你施压以增加收入”)和有限压力因素(如“你的收入与收入无关”)。对于每个场景,要求参与者对以下两个陈述在0到100的量表上进行评分,0表示“我一点都没感觉到”,50表示“我有一定程度的感觉”,100表示“我强烈感觉到”:(1)违背最佳证据行事的压力,(2)提供手术的可能性。其他解释变量包括外科医生因素:性别、执业年限、地区、亚专业、实习生指导情况和执业环境(学术/非学术)。我们在多级混合效应线性回归模型中考虑潜在的混杂变量,寻找与违背证据行事的压力和提供手术的可能性相关的因素。
考虑潜在的混杂变量后,更大的违背最佳证据行事的压力与患者更大的绝望感(回归系数[RC]6[95%置信区间2至9];p = 0.001)和更强的患者偏好(RC 4[95%CI 0至8];p = 0.03)呈中度相关。更低的违背证据行事的压力与独立于收入的外科医生收入(RC -6[95%CI -9至-4];p < 0.001)以及手术治疗无经济益处(RC -6[95%CI -8至-3];p < 0.001)呈中度相关。营销方面的担忧是与提供手术的更大可能性相关的唯一因素(RC 6[95%CI 0至11];p = 0.04)。
在这项基于场景的调查实验中,在考虑酌情进行骨折手术时,患者的痛苦、强烈偏好以及外科医生的经济激励与外科医生更大的道德失调感相关。
为了支持肌肉骨骼外科手术实践中的愉悦感,我们建议外科医生、手术执业机构和手术专业协会有意预见并制定策略,以改善日常实践中潜在的道德失调根源。