Bringing light into the dark: Exploring the impact of eliciting moral elevation on daily experiences of veterans with moral injury


Journal article


Adam P. McGuire, Lindsay L. Lange, Adrian J. Bravo, Jeff Gabelmann, Zannie Montgomery, Rachel Davies, Michelle L. Kelley
PsyArXiv Preprints, 2024


Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
McGuire, A. P., Lange, L. L., Bravo, A. J., Gabelmann, J., Montgomery, Z., Davies, R., & Kelley, M. L. (2024). Bringing light into the dark: Exploring the impact of eliciting moral elevation on daily experiences of veterans with moral injury. PsyArXiv Preprints. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/wgbva


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., Lindsay L. Lange, Adrian J. Bravo, Jeff Gabelmann, Zannie Montgomery, Rachel Davies, and Michelle L. Kelley. “Bringing Light into the Dark: Exploring the Impact of Eliciting Moral Elevation on Daily Experiences of Veterans with Moral Injury.” PsyArXiv Preprints (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
McGuire, Adam P., et al. “Bringing Light into the Dark: Exploring the Impact of Eliciting Moral Elevation on Daily Experiences of Veterans with Moral Injury.” PsyArXiv Preprints, 2024, doi:10.31234/osf.io/wgbva.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{adam2024a,
  title = {Bringing light into the dark: Exploring the impact of eliciting moral elevation on daily experiences of veterans with moral injury},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {PsyArXiv Preprints},
  doi = {10.31234/osf.io/wgbva},
  author = {McGuire, Adam P. and Lange, Lindsay L. and Bravo, Adrian J. and Gabelmann, Jeff and Montgomery, Zannie and Davies, Rachel and Kelley, Michelle L.}
}

Abstract

Moral elevation is described as feeling inspired after witnessing someone engage in virtuous behavior, whereas moral injury is the result of internal conflict that stems from exposure to morally injurious experiences. This study explored the relationship between eliciting moral elevation, daily motives, and affective experiences for veterans with moral injury-related distress. Using an ABA design, veterans (N=26)first completed 4 daily surveys that only included brief daily measures (A), followed by 4 days of measures combined with a daily elevation-eliciting exercise (B), then 4 daily surveys with measures only again (A). On days 5-8, elevation was elicited by presenting short video clips featuring moral exemplars performing virtuous acts, consistent with previous work. Using linear mixed effects models, we assessed the concurrent effects of state elevation experienced on daily experiences during days with elevation elicitation. We also fit linear mixed effects models to compare pre-post changes in daily experiences before and after days 5-8 of watching elevation videos. Results indicated state elevation after videos was linked with higher daily positive affect, self-improvement motives, and compassionate motives. Veterans also reported a significant decrease in daily negative affect, fear, hostility, guilt, and sadness, along with significant decreases in suicidal ideation in the four days after watching elevation videos compared to baseline. These findings provide preliminary support for the potential benefits of eliciting elevation in veterans with moral injury distress and suggests elevation elicitation could be associated with desirable outcomes in daily life.

Summary of estimates(dots) with 95% CIs (lines)for linear mixed effects models with a series of daily outcomes relevant tomoral injury.Effects highlighted by blue (top figure) or red (bottom figure) indicate significant effects that also do not include 0 in the 95% CIs.

Share



Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in