Webinar II: COVID-19 & Moral Injury

Webinar II: COVID-19 & Moral Injury

Datum/Tid
25 nov 2020
15:00 - 16:30

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Detta webinarium är en del i webinarie-serien Trauma-informed Responses to Covid-19: A New ESTSS Webinar Series on Meeting the Psychosocial Challenges of the Pandemic som European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS) anordnar varje onsdag mellan 18 november och 16 december 2020. Läs mera här: webinar-program

A moral injury has been dened as an event where someone has seen, witnessed or done some thing that breaches their moral or ethical code. Whilst a moral injury is not a mental illness, people who have them often experience strong feelings of shame, guilt or anger and we know that for many, moral injuries can occur alongside symptoms of PTSD and depression.

Aims

To disseminate the current understanding around conceptualisations of moral injury.

Topics

In this webinar, participants will gain a better understanding of

  • Current research on moral injury in the UK
  • Types of events leading to moral injury
  • How moral injury is thought to develop
  • Potential risks and protective factors for experiencing moral injury

Learning outcomes

Participants will acquire knowledge about the history of moral injury, the relationship between moral injury and other mental health disorders and ideas about the key constructs to measure moral injury.

Speakers

Dr. Victoria Williamson is a researcher at King’s College London and the University of Oxford. At King’s College London, Victoria’s research focuses on psychological adjustment after traumatic events, including combat trauma, human trafficking and moral injury. At the University of Oxford, her research aims to identify effective approaches to screen for child anxiety difficulties in schools and deliver an accessible parent-led intervention to support child adjustment.

Dr. Dominic Murphy works at Combat Stress (a national veterans mental health charity in the UK) where he established and now leads a research department specialising in veteran’s mental health. The Combat Stress research department is co-located within King’s College London where Dominic continues to be a member. Dominic is part of the Forces in Mind Trust mental health steering group, editor for a number of journals and member of several international military mental health research consortiums. In 2019, he was elected the President of the UK Psychological Trauma Society (UKPTS) and onto the executive board of the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). Dominic has specialised clinically and academically within the field of PTSD and military mental health and is widely published with over 100 articles to date.

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