DSM-5 doesn’t name it, but moral distress is everywhere in medicine
The mental health crisis clinicians face but won’t talk about this May
Ask anyone about health care reform, and you’ll likely get passionate responses. Single-payer versus market-driven. Universal coverage versus cost-containment. Clinicians, though, usually have simpler wishes: fewer hours spent charting, more time spent actually caring.
But there’s a quieter, deeper conversation that’s rarely included when we talk about health care’s problems: moral distress.
DSM-5 doesn’t name it, but moral distress is everywhere in medicine












![Politics and fear have replaced science in U.S. pain management [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/11c2db8f-2b20-4a4d-81cc-083ae0f47d6e-190x100.jpeg)


![Why physicians pay more in taxes and how to reclaim your income [PODCAST]](https://kevinmd.com/wp-content/uploads/65a06f47-06d1-44f6-b074-deb9a2d19a25-190x100.jpeg)




