Health care is facing a moral emergency, argue experts

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by British Medical Journal

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Health care has lost its human, moral, and relational foundations and must reconnect with its core values to improve both patient and staff well-being, argue experts in The BMJ. Despite unprecedented advances in diagnostic precision, therapeutic capability, and computational power, a deep paradox exists, say authors Don Berwick, Maureen Bisognano and Bob Klaber.

Patients increasingly feel processed rather than cared for, staff report moral distress and loss of meaning, and the workforce is hemorrhaging people at an unsustainable rate.

The core problem, they write, is that we have accumulated extraordinary technical power while quietly losing the human, moral, and relational foundations of care on which its effectiveness ultimately depends.

Several powerful forces have helped create this imbalance, they explain. For instance, in some countries, the pursuit of profit has choked health care's moral purpose, while across the globe modern health care has become an industrialized system that processes patients through standardized protocols in ways that risk disregarding the unique texture of individual lives.

This has happened through an imbalanced emphasis on a "rational" lexicon (focused on measurement, targets and efficiency) over a "relational" one (concerned with feelings, kindness and human connection).

Yet re-establishing the relational balance is not a sentimental or "soft" approach; it is vital for quality and safety, they argue.

They point to research on NHS culture and behavior that found organizations where staff felt supported and valued had consistently lower patient death rates, while the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) framework shows that the conditions for increasing joy in work—clarity of purpose, psychological safety, and feeling that what matters to you is actually valued—are both achievable and measurable.

Kindness—linked empirically to better staff retention, higher teamworking scores, and improved patient outcomes—should also be repositioned at the business end of delivering high quality care, they add.

The "What matters to you?" movement, inspired by an article in the New England Journal of Medicine, exemplifies this shift, changing the clinical encounter from a diagnostic focus to a partnership based on the patient's lived reality.

While the forces pulling health care away from its human dimension are structural and powerful, they are not irreversible, they say. Every ward round, clinical consultation, and leadership conversation is a small but powerful opportunity for all of us working in health care to balance relational practice with rational systems and processes.

The evidence is clear: patients do better and staff thrive when health care systems invest in joy, kindness, and compassionate leadership, they write. "We do not need to wait for system reform. We can begin now on our collective leadership challenge to reconnect health care with its mission and purpose."

Publication details

Healthcare's moral emergency: reconnecting healthcare with its mission and purpose, The BMJ (2026). DOI: 10.1136/bmj.s969

Journal information: British Medical Journal (BMJ) , New England Journal of Medicine

Key medical concepts

MortalityTreatment Outcome

Clinical categories

Hospital medicine Provided by British Medical Journal Who's behind this story?

Sadie Harley

BSc Life Sciences & Ecology. Microbiology lab background with pharmaceutical news experience in oil, gas, and renewable industries. Full profile →

Andrew Zinin

Master's in physics with research experience. Long-time science news enthusiast. Plays key role in Science X's editorial success. Full profile →

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