Luck Lauretta, Jackson Debra, Usher Kim
School of Nursing Sciences, James Cook University, Cairns, Qld, and School of Nursing, College of Health and Science, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
J Clin Nurs. 2008 Apr;17(8):1071-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2006.01870.x. Epub 2007 Apr 5.
The purpose of the study was to explore the meaning(s) that emergency department nurses ascribe to acts of violence from patients, their family and friends and what impact these meaning(s) have upon how they respond to such acts.
Violence in the health sector is of international concern. In high acuity areas such as emergency departments, nurses have an increased risk of violence. The literature further suggests that violence towards nurses in emergency departments is under-reported.
This study was undertaken in 2005, at a regional Australian Emergency Department with 20 consenting registered nurses. Using an instrumental case study design, both qualitative and quantitative data were generated. Qualitative data were collected using participant observation, semi-structured interviews, informal field interviews and researcher journaling. Quantitative data of violent events were generated using a structured observational guide. Textual data were analysed thematically and numeric data were analysed using frequency counts. Mixed methods and concurrent data analysis contributed to the rigour of this study.
Emergency department nurses made judgments about the meaning of violent events according to three factors: (i) perceived personalization of the violence; (ii) presence of mitigating factors; and (iii) the reason for the presentation. The meanings that were ascribed to individual acts of violence informed the responses that nurses initiated. CONCLUSIONS; The findings show that violence towards emergency department nurses is interpreted in a more systematic and complex way than the current definitions of violence make possible. The meanings given to violence were contextually constructed and these ascribed meaning(s) and judgments informed the actions that the nurses took in response to both the act of violence and the agent of violence. Relevance to clinical practice. Understanding the meaning(s) of violence towards nurses contributes to the discussions surrounding why nurses under-report violence. Further, these findings bring insights into how nurses can and do, handle violence in the workplace.
本研究旨在探究急诊科护士赋予患者及其家人和朋友暴力行为的意义,以及这些意义如何影响他们对这类行为的反应。
卫生部门的暴力行为是国际关注的问题。在急诊科等高急症科室,护士遭受暴力的风险更高。文献还表明,急诊科针对护士的暴力行为报告不足。
本研究于2005年在澳大利亚一个地区急诊科开展,有20名注册护士自愿参与。采用工具性案例研究设计,收集定性和定量数据。定性数据通过参与观察、半结构化访谈、非正式现场访谈和研究者日志收集。暴力事件的定量数据通过结构化观察指南生成。文本数据进行主题分析,数字数据进行频次统计分析。混合方法和同步数据分析增强了本研究的严谨性。
急诊科护士根据三个因素对暴力事件的意义做出判断:(i)暴力行为的感知个性化程度;(ii)减轻因素的存在;(iii)就诊原因。赋予个别暴力行为的意义影响了护士采取的应对措施。
研究结果表明,针对急诊科护士的暴力行为的解读比当前暴力定义所允许的更为系统和复杂。赋予暴力行为的意义是根据具体情境构建的,这些赋予的意义和判断影响了护士针对暴力行为及其实施者所采取的行动。与临床实践的相关性。理解针对护士的暴力行为的意义有助于围绕护士为何少报暴力行为的讨论。此外,这些研究结果为护士在工作场所如何应对暴力行为提供了见解。