Hong Soyun, Nam Sujin, Wong Janet Yuen Ha, Kim Heejung
College of Nursing Brain Korea 21 FOUR Project, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Department of Nursing, Korean Bible University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
BMC Nurs. 2023 Oct 4;22(1):354. doi: 10.1186/s12912-023-01502-7.
Workplace violence has had a significant and negative psychological impact on nursing professionals worldwide. Concerted worldwide efforts to improve work environments have not yet removed nursing professionals from the threat of violence. It is highly essential to conduct comparative research in various working environments where the nurses of each country have unique experiences of workplace violence. The aim of this study was to examine the differences in the rate, associated factors, and post-traumatic responses to workplace violence between South Korean and Chinese nurses in Hong Kong among East Asian countries.
A cross-sectional, correlational study design recruited a total of 471 registered nurses (319 South Korean nurses and 152 Chinese nurses in Hong Kong; overall response rate = 78.5%) at online communities in South Korea and Hong Kong. The data were collected by conducting a Qualtrics survey from January 15, 2020, to July 24, 2021. A structured questionnaire was administered for data collection, including rate of workplace violence, perception of workplace violence, attitudes toward workplace violence, coping styles, post-traumatic cognitions, post-traumatic stress disorder, post-traumatic growth, and mental health indicators (depression, anxiety, and stress). T-test, chi-squared, and binary logistic regression analyses were conducted.
In our sample, 30.7% South Korean nurses and 31.6% Chinese nurses in Hong Kong had experienced workplace violence. South Korean and Chinese nurses in Hong Kong with experience of workplace violence had lower perceptions of it. Nurses with experience of workplace violence reported lower levels of mental health, and this trend was more prominent among South Korean nurses.
Our study findings showed a positive association between workplace violence and post-traumatic responses in both settings. We found that the close monitoring of post-traumatic responses associated with workplace violence could be improved by enhancing nurses' perception of workplace violence.
工作场所暴力对全球护理专业人员产生了重大的负面心理影响。全球为改善工作环境所做的协同努力尚未使护理专业人员摆脱暴力威胁。在各国护士有着独特工作场所暴力经历的不同工作环境中进行比较研究至关重要。本研究的目的是探讨东亚国家中韩国护士和中国香港护士在工作场所暴力发生率、相关因素以及创伤后反应方面的差异。
采用横断面、相关性研究设计,在韩国和中国香港的在线社区共招募了471名注册护士(319名韩国护士和152名中国香港护士;总体回复率 = 78.5%)。数据收集于2020年1月15日至2021年7月24日通过Qualtrics调查进行。使用结构化问卷进行数据收集,内容包括工作场所暴力发生率、对工作场所暴力的认知、对工作场所暴力的态度、应对方式、创伤后认知、创伤后应激障碍、创伤后成长以及心理健康指标(抑郁、焦虑和压力)。进行了t检验、卡方检验和二元逻辑回归分析。
在我们的样本中,30.7%的韩国护士和31.6%的中国香港护士曾经历过工作场所暴力。有工作场所暴力经历的韩国护士和中国香港护士对其认知较低。有工作场所暴力经历的护士心理健康水平较低,且这种趋势在韩国护士中更为明显。
我们的研究结果表明,在两种环境中工作场所暴力与创伤后反应之间均存在正相关。我们发现,通过增强护士对工作场所暴力的认知,可以改善对与工作场所暴力相关的创伤后反应的密切监测。