Chief nurse executives (CNEs) face unprecedented moral and ethical challenges navigating tensions between professional obligations, organizational demands, and personal values. This article distinguishes morality, individual conscience, and values from ethics, formal codes and professional standards, and examines how misalignment between these domains generates moral distress. Without intervention, accumulated distress produces moral residue, triggering a crescendo effect that may culminate in moral injury and professional departure. The article addresses organizational culture evaluation, economic consequences of ethical compromise, and the critical need for explicit institutional support of the CNE. Evidence-based resources, including the Rushton Moral Resilience Scale, ANA Code of Ethics, and Beauchamp-Childress “principlist framework” are identified to provide practical guidance for sustaining integrity.
Tim Porter-O’Grady (Mon,) studied this question.