Home
Scholarly Works
“We're all just trying to do right by our...
Journal article

“We're all just trying to do right by our patients”: a qualitative study of healthcare and research personnel’s moral experiences of engaging with COVID-19 research during the first wave of the pandemic

Abstract

BackgroundAlthough research plays a critical role during emerging pandemics such as COVID-19, clinical care and public health priorities may be in tension with research priorities at times. This study aimed to better understand the on-the-ground realities and experiences of those who worked at the intersections of research and clinical care early in the COVID-19 pandemic to clarify the ethical dimensions of pandemic research and the support needs of those involved. The research question guiding this inquiry was: What were healthcare and research personnel’s moral experiences of engaging with COVID-19 research during the first wave of the pandemic?MethodsThis Interpretive Description study included 26 semi-structured telephone or virtual interviews with healthcare and research personnel conducted between May and September 2020 to explore their moral experiences related to involvement in COVID-19 research. Data were analyzed inductively using constant comparative techniques.ResultsThe overarching theme characterizing participants’ moral experiences was trying to do right by their patients in the midst of the storm. Five sub-themes included: (1) striving for evidence-based practice in the absence of evidence, (2) struggling to balance speed, ethical standards, and rigour, (3) advocating for patients in the rush to develop COVID-19 evidence, (4) bearing the burdens and risks of conducting COVID-19 research, and (5) feeling part of something bigger.ConclusionsStudy findings raise questions regarding what it means to be a good physician, nurse, or healthcare professional in the absence of evidence and amidst pressures to generate it quickly.Clinical trial numberNot applicable.

Authors

Yantzi R; Hunt M; Moll S; Wahoush O; Amir T; Yadav E; Schwartz L

Journal

BMC Health Services Research, , ,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 27, 2026

DOI

10.1186/s12913-026-14050-y

ISSN

1472-6963

Contact the Experts team