Mental Health Nurses' Attitudes and Perceived Self-Efficacy Toward Inpatient Aggression: A Cross-Sectional Study of Associations With Nurse-Related Characteristics.
Autor: | Verhaeghe, Sofie, Duprez, Veerle, Beeckman, Dimitri, Leys, Joris, Van Meijel, Berno, Van Hecke, Ann |
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Předmět: |
PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
AGGRESSION (Psychology) PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout STATISTICAL correlation HOSPITAL patients JOB stress NURSES' attitudes PSYCHIATRIC hospitals PSYCHIATRIC nursing QUALITY of life QUESTIONNAIRES REGRESSION analysis RESEARCH funding SCALE analysis (Psychology) SELF-efficacy SEX distribution T-test (Statistics) PLANNED behavior theory CROSS-sectional method DATA analysis software DESCRIPTIVE statistics ONE-way analysis of variance |
Zdroj: | Perspectives in Psychiatric Care; Jan2016, Vol. 52 Issue 1, p12-24, 13p, 1 Diagram, 6 Charts |
Abstrakt: | Purpose: To explore mental health nurses' attitude and self‐efficacy to adult inpatient aggression, and to explore the association with nurse‐related characteristics. Design and Method: Cross‐sectional study in a sample of 219 mental health nurses in nine psychiatric hospitals, with stepwise linear regression analysis to detect predictive models. Findings: Female and less experienced nurses were less likely to blame patients for their behavior. Gender, burnout, secondary traumatic stress, and compassion satisfaction accounted for 26.2% of the variability in mental health nurses' self‐efficacy toward aggression. Practice Implications: There needs to be attention to professional quality of life for mental health nurses, to provide them with of self‐efficacy and a positive attitude toward coping with aggression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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