Ferns Terry
University of Greenwich, London.
Nurs Stand. 2006;20(40):41-5. doi: 10.7748/ns2006.06.20.40.41.c4178.
This article examines factors that contribute to nurses failing to report incidents of violence and aggression in the clinical area and it develops the information published in a previous article (Ferns and Chojnacka 2005). Broader social factors are considered, including gender, violence experienced by women, the status of the nursing profession and bureaucratic structures that contribute to under-reporting. The life experiences of individual nursing staff play a significant role in how they react to violence in the clinical area. Strategies to minimise violence against nurses should consider the social, political and personal issues that limit the reporting of violent incidents. Only by reporting such incidents can the extent of violence towards nurses be determined and minimised.
本文探讨了导致护士未能报告临床区域暴力和攻击事件的因素,并完善了之前一篇文章(Ferns和Chojnacka,2005年)中发布的信息。文中考虑了更广泛的社会因素,包括性别、女性所经历的暴力、护理职业的地位以及导致报告不足的官僚结构。个体护理人员的生活经历在他们对临床区域暴力的反应中起着重要作用。减少针对护士暴力行为的策略应考虑到限制暴力事件报告的社会、政治和个人问题。只有报告此类事件,才能确定并减少针对护士的暴力行为的程度。