Attitudes, opinions, behaviors, and emotions of the nursing staff toward patient restraint
Autor: | Nomi Werbloff, Avraham Bleich, Marc Gelkopf, Ziva Roffe, Pnina Behrbalk, Yuval Melamed |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Restraint Physical Nursing staff Inservice Training Attitude of Health Personnel Emotions Psychiatric Nursing Nursing Staff Hospital Violence Social Environment Risk Assessment Nursing Intervention (counseling) Surveys and Questionnaires Dangerous Behavior Medicine Humans business.industry Mental Disorders Physical restraints Social environment Middle Aged Harm Female Clinical Competence Pshychiatric Mental Health Clinical competence business Nurse-Patient Relations Clinical psychology |
Zdroj: | Issues in mental health nursing. 30(12) |
ISSN: | 1096-4673 |
Popis: | Physical restraints are used as a psychiatric intervention to protect psychiatric inpatients from self-harm or harm to others, by securing a safe environment for the patients and staff. We examined nurses' attitudes, environmental concerns, and emotional responses to physical restraint of psychiatric inpatients, using a questionnaire we constructed expressly for this study. Nurses reported that the main criteria for restraint were endangerment of the patient's self or surroundings. Bothersome actions and environmental conditions also significantly impacted nurses' decisions to physically restrain patients. Emotional reactions to restraining procedures as experienced by staff and as perceived for patients were generally negative. Nurses should be trained to deal with violent patients, establish limits, and recognize the therapeutic aspect of restraints in order to respond assertively. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |