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Sensemaking in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic: A narrative exploration of polarised morality in an NHS Trust.
Faux-Nightingale, Alice; Kelemen, Mihaela; Lilley, Simon; Stewart, Caroline.
  • Faux-Nightingale A; Keele University, Keele, UK.
  • Kelemen M; Nottingham University, Jubilee Campus, Nottingham, UK.
  • Lilley S; University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UK.
  • Stewart C; Keele University, Keele, UK.
Sociol Health Illn ; 2022 Nov 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2229910
ABSTRACT
This article presents an analysis of personal diaries kept by health-care staff within a specialist NHS Trust in England during the initial 3 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. It adopts a moral sensemaking perspective to explore how NHS employees mobilised and reframed ideas of right and wrong in order to make sense of unprecedented uncertainty and displacement. By focussing on how the macro and micro politics of the pandemic were played out in the organisation, the study finds that polarised moral judgements were invoked in order to justify and rationalise a broad array of associated emergent emotions, intuitions, behaviours and practices. This polarisation of moral responses could be seen as a desire to bring order out of chaos and put matters back into place following displacement. This is inevitably an ongoing, complex and variegated enterprise whose results can be as often discomforting as they can be reassuring. Indeed, while moral sensemaking was partly beneficial for staff in that it promoted a greater sense of camaraderie and support for others, it also appeared to have darker consequences in terms of staff wellbeing and the development of more impermeable social boundaries across the organisation through processes of moral 'othering'.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Language: English Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: 1467-9566.13586

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Language: English Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: 1467-9566.13586