[External] Moral Injury Certificate Program
The Moral Injury Certificate Program is designed to increase participants’ knowledge of trauma, moral distress, and moral injury, drawing from research and work in various disciplines. These disciplines include the fields of social work, psychology, spiritual care, mental health counseling, religion, and arts and healing. It will also increase competency for developing and implementing peer support strategies for processing distressful experiences as a means of facilitating moral repair and building moral resilience.
From course host Shay Moral Injury Center:
Moral injury is the suffering people experience when in high-stakes situations, things go wrong, and harm results from something a person did, witnessed, failed to prevent, or received. First coined by Dr. Jonathan Shay in 1994 to refer to the “undoing of character” caused by the moral anguish of combat veterans, moral injury is a concept that has been growing in awareness and relevance among healthcare workers, first responders, social workers, journalists, activists, and others.
This course is designed to increase participants’ knowledge of trauma, moral distress, and moral injury, drawing from research and work in various disciplines. These disciplines include the fields of social work, psychology, spiritual care, mental health counseling, religion, and arts and healing. It will also increase competency for developing and implementing peer support strategies for processing distressful experiences as a means of facilitating moral repair and building moral resilience. Learning content will be delivered through lectures, reading, participation in peer learning cohorts and practicums, and development of a capstone project.
This is a 50-hour course comprised of synchronous sessions (12 hours group discussions, 9 hours practicums) and asynchronous study time (9 hours lecture videos, 20 hours readings and capstone project preparation). This averages to about 5 hours of engagement per course week.
All course content will be on the Teachable platform, which students will have access to for a year (until September 8, 2026). Access to good internet connection and a Zoom account (for synchronous sessions) is required for successful engagement.
We will cap the enrollment to about 40 students.
Note: our practicum trainings and educational ethos are premised on peer support and contextual care, and is distinct from a clinical and/or medicalized approach to moral injury care.
Moral Injury Certificates & CEs/CMEs:
A certificate of completion is offered to students who complete the course, including attendance of all live sessions (discussion groups and practicums) and submission of a capstone project.
30 CEs in chaplaincy or social work are provided upon request.
We partner with Learner+ to offer access to an AI-powered reflective portfolio that rewards CME/CE credits from meaningful reflections for RNs, MDs, and other Healthcare Professionals. Interested MICP students can register for an account at $50/year, for access to unlimited reflections for CME/CE credits. Learn more at https://champions.learner.plus/voa/
Moral Injury Certificate Program Course Content:
Each week will comprise of either lecture recordings or synchronous practicum sessions, with accompanying reading assignments. There will be live group discussions during lecture weeks.
Course topics include:
Week 1: What is Moral Injury?
Week 2: Identifying Moral Injury & Risk Factors
Week 3: Processing Moral Injury (Practicum)
Week 4: Religious, Spiritual, Cultural Traditions
Week 5: Dimensions of Recovery
Week 6: Strategies & Processes for Recovery
Week 7: Training in Moral Injury Care (Practicum)
Week 8: Practicing Moral Injury Care (Practicum)
Week 9: Capstone Project Preparation
Week 10: Capstone Project Presentations
** The Moral Injury Certificate Program will be available on the Teachable platform starting September 5, 2025. Students will be contacted prior to the course start date with instructions and prep materials.
We are thankful to the following consultation group members who provided their expertise and insights for the curriculum: Rev. Alice Cabotaje (M.Div., BCC, ACPE), Dr. Danielle Hairston (M.D.), Dr. Frederic G. Reamer (Ph.D.), Michael Van Wert (MPH, MSW, LICSW), Rev. Dr. Stephanie M. Crumpton (Ph.D.), Rev. Dr. Trace Haythorn (Ph.D.), Rev. Dr. Zachary Moon (Ph.D.)
See more from the Chaplaincy Innovation Lab on moral injury here.