Lived Experience of Violence Perpetrated by Treated Patients and Their Visitors in Intensive Care Units: A Qualitative Study of Nurses.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING Journal of Nursing Research Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1097/jnr.0000000000000562
I-Lu Fang, Mei-Chi Hsu, Wen-Chen Ouyang
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Abstract

Background: Patient and visitor violence (PVV) is a widespread problem for health professionals. Nurses working in intensive care units (ICUs) face a relatively high risk of experiencing PVV, which significantly impacts both the health of nurses and the institution as a whole. The subjective perceptions of ICU nurses regarding PVV are inadequately explored in the literature.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore the perspectives, experiences, and perceptions of PVV in ICU nurses and to better understand the precipitating factors of violence.

Methods: A phenomenological qualitative design and purposive sampling were used. A semistructured interview guide was used to conduct in-depth interviews with 12 ICU nurses with PVV experiences. Giorgi's method of analysis was used to discover and identify the essential categories of experience.

Results: Five main experience categories were identified: family and patient factors as flashpoints, managing suppressed emotions by weathering the emotional storm, spiritual awakening after violence, and strategies for surviving further violence. The participants' experiences with PVV included a range of caring and mental health difficulties. In ICU settings, patient progress is often unpredictable, resulting in discrepancies between patient/family expectations and reality. Because feelings of frustration and powerlessness can eventually cause exhaustion in ICU nurses, implementing effective emotional management, stress adjustment, psychological counseling, team support, and violence intervention programs are crucial.

Conclusions/implications for practice: This study provides new information on the process by which nurses can progress from inner trauma to self-recovery, moving from a negative affectivity disposition to a better understanding of threat appraisals and coping response options. Nurses should increase their awareness of the complexity of the phenomenon and of the interplay among the factors underlying PVV. The results of this study suggest that routine confusion and delirium assessments to rule out patients with ICU delirium in ICUs are important to preventing PVV. This study considers some of the implications of the research findings for nursing managers. Interventions, training programs, and/or management action should be used to ensure psychological and mental support is extended to all witnesses of PVV events and not only to those targeted by violence.

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重症监护室中接受治疗的患者及其来访者实施暴力的生活经历:对护士的定性研究。
背景:患者和访客暴力(PVV)是卫生专业人员普遍存在的问题。在重症监护室工作的护士面临相对较高的PVV风险,这对护士和整个机构的健康都有重大影响。ICU护士对PVV的主观认知在文献中没有得到充分的探讨。目的:本研究旨在探讨ICU护士对PVV的看法、经历和看法,并更好地了解暴力的诱因。方法:采用现象学定性设计和目的性抽样。采用半结构化访谈指南对12名有PVV经验的ICU护士进行了深入访谈。Giorgi的分析方法被用来发现和识别经验的基本类别。结果:确定了五个主要的体验类别:家庭和患者因素作为爆发点,通过抵御情绪风暴来管理被压抑的情绪,暴力后的精神觉醒,以及在进一步暴力中幸存的策略。参与者的PVV经历包括一系列的护理和心理健康困难。在ICU环境中,患者的进展往往是不可预测的,导致患者/家人的期望与现实之间存在差异。由于沮丧和无力感最终会导致ICU护士精疲力竭,因此实施有效的情绪管理、压力调整、心理咨询、团队支持和暴力干预计划至关重要。结论/对实践的启示:这项研究提供了关于护士从内心创伤到自我恢复的过程的新信息,从消极的情感倾向转变为更好地理解威胁评估和应对措施。护士应提高对PVV现象复杂性和潜在因素之间相互作用的认识。这项研究的结果表明,常规的困惑和谵妄评估以排除ICU谵妄患者对预防PVV很重要。本研究考虑了研究结果对护理管理人员的一些启示。应采取干预措施、培训计划和/或管理行动,确保将心理和精神支持扩展到PVV事件的所有目击者,而不仅仅是那些被暴力袭击的人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
60
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ​​​The Journal of Nursing Research (JNR) is comprised of original articles that come from a variety of national and international institutions and reflect trends and issues of contemporary nursing practice in Taiwan. All articles are published in English so that JNR can better serve the whole nursing profession and introduce nursing in Taiwan to people around the world. Topics cover not only the field of nursing but also related fields such as psychology, education, management and statistics.
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