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Introduction: Moral injury is the psychological distress resulting from actions, or the lack thereof, which violate one’s moral or ethical code. There is a notable gap in literature exploring moral injury among substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and community service providers. Despite the lack of literature describing moral injury among the SUD workforce, moral injury was discussed extensively during meetings of the Community Representative Council (CIRCL) of the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN), which engages community members within the CTN Nodes to understand perspectives of people with lived/living experience and those providing substance use services.
Methods: In response to this consistently raised topic, this commentary reviews the literature on moral injury related to the SUD workforce, as well as the perspectives of CIRCL members on the unique and persistent challenges faced by SUD treatment and community services providers.
Results: Members of CIRCL in the SUD treatment and community provider workforce consistently described experiencing morally injurious events, including acts of commission and omission, bearing witness, and observing betrayal from those in power. While some experiences are akin to those experienced by providers in other healthcare settings, some were unique to front-line SUD treatment and community services providers. These experiences caused intense experiences of guilt, isolation, and hopelessness, sometimes contributing to turnover.
Conclusions: Addressing moral injury among the SUD provider workforce may require unique mitigation and prevention strategies, potentially involving structural changes at the organizational, social, and policy levels that support the SUD treatment and community service workforce, ultimately improving not just the wellbeing of providers and patients, but the wellbeing of our communities.

Authentic community engagement requires partnership with those who share similar situations, concerns, or challenges. Community engagement in research can promote equitable representation, help inform important research questions and deliverables, and increase the likelihood of developing relevant and appropriate interventions that will be implemented and sustained. Established in 1999, the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (CTN) is a cooperative agreement within the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and functions as a nationwide consortium of research scientists, treatment providers and other community members collaborating to improve care for substance use in communities across the US. The CTN is committed to community-engaged research. Developed in 2023, the CTN Community Representative Council (CIRCL) formed as a natural progression of this commitment, designed to systematically identify front line challenges warranting research and to recognize emerging community-based innovations – forms of “practice-based evidence” developed in response to real-world needs. CTN Nodes (regional hubs) nominated community members, many of whom are people with lived experience (PWLE) of substance use to serve as Council representatives to enhance the identification, communication, and dissemination of the needs and experiences of individuals served by CTN research across the US. This commentary provides an overview of CIRCL’s conceptualization and creation, operation, and impacts on CTN communities in its first year.