Moral Distress in Engagement Professionals, with Mark Weir

Our guest Mark Weir is a seasoned engagement professional working in healthcare. Typically, engagement-related communities of practice tend to focus on things like best practices and 'how to' - not so much on the emotional toll it can take to fully engage in the work. In a recent IAP2 Canada workshop, Mark explored the effects of "moral distress", which he defines as feeling stuck and wanting to do the right thing but constrained due to systemic or institutional barriers - which are beyond the engagement professional's control. We spoke to Mark about the experience of carrying these kinds of burdens, which can go unseen or unacknowledged. Not only did we get to delve deeper into the experience of engagement work - this was also an opportunity to take a closer look at the context of engagement in general. What are some possible causes of this distress? And what does it say about the overall project of patient engagement?  In this episode, we hear from Mark about the challenges faced by engagement professionals (in healthcare) due to moral distress, and then later in the episode, we try to sort through some of the bigger, confounding questions that seem to follow us from episode to episode! [download transcript] Guest: Mark Weir, Director of Strategic Planning and Community Engagement, Woodstock Hospital (Ontario) Mark on twitter Mark's profile on LinkedIn Mentioned in this episode: Our previous episodes featuring engagement professionals: Expertise Part 2, with Francine Buchanan Evaluating Holland Bloorview’s Family Leadership Program, with Aman Sium  Lived Experience, with Katherine Dib and Katie Birnie of SKIP Walking a Tightrope: Inside the Engagement Professional Role, with Kelli Dilworth IAP2 Canada website First definition of moral distress in nursing - Jameton, A., Nursing Practice: The ethical issues. Prentice Hall Series in the Philosophy of Medicine, ed. G. S1984, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. Mark Weir's IAP2 Canada workshop slides - Weighing on Our Shoulders: Moral Distress and Compassion Fatigue in Engagement Professionals Additional music and production support provided by Angus Turney

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Matters of Engagement examines issues at the intersection of health, health care and society. Including: how people in Canada access and experience health care service delivery and distribution; how those experiences impact both individual and community health; and the multitude of environmental, systemic, and political factors that favour some and disadvantage many. Jennifer Johannesen and Emily Nicholas Angl produce each episode with the aim of illuminating difficult or confounding issues, to provoke much-needed critical dialogue among all stakeholders.