Experiences of Psychiatric Nurses Who Care for Patients with Physical and Psychological Violence: A Phenomenological Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
- How do nurses describe their experiences related to violent patients with anger and aggressiveness in psychiatric hospital settings?
- What are the nurses’ perceptions when dealing with aggressive and angry patients?
- What has changed in the nurses’ professional/personal attitude and behavior as a result of these experiences?
2.2. Study Participants
- Over three years of work experience in a general hospital with over 300 beds.
- Experience caring for acute patients with severe anger and aggressiveness in psychiatric ward.
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Methods to Ensure Rigor
3. Results
3.1. General Participant Information
3.2. Classification of Psychiatric Nurses’ Experiences
3.2.1. Category 1. Fear of Violence
‘… Because safety is a priority, I tried to escape without considering the situation, and I asked the male staff for help’(Participant 5)
‘… When violent patients refuse to talk, it’s best to wait until the violence subsides. It’s always best if no one gets hurt’(Participant 7)
‘I don’t think there is much that a nurse can actually do in the acute phase. It’s also difficult for nurses to cope with a patient who tends to be biased towards women and less likely to listen’(Participant 12)
‘When they suddenly became aggressive, I notified the doctor, and then while injecting the medicine, the patient hit my face with his legs. Also, the patient spat on my face several times and threatened me using sexual insults or curse words’ (Participant 2).
‘… There was an alcoholic patient who couldn’t control his anger. One day, we were shocked by his outburst of anger; he threatened us with a knife’(Participant 10)
‘… even when I tried to understand patients, the violent situation that suddenly appeared made me feel betrayed and confused; It hurt me psychologically and spiritually and shocked me’(Participant 3)
‘… at first, when the patient was violent, it was too much psychological pressure, and I experienced heartache’(Participant 7)
3.2.2. Category 2. Placed in a Poor Working Environment
‘… I feel embarrassed and stressed out by a heavy workload and sudden outbreaks, and I am resentful of the environmental weakness’(Participant 1)
‘… Unlike closed wards, open wards are weakly regulated. If the nurse refuses to listen to a patient’s demand, the hospital threatens to fire her. The patients take advantage of this hospital regulation’(Participant 5)
‘… I think there is a limit to monitoring patients with insufficient manpower. It’s not easy to endure every aspect of a poor hospital environment where profit still has to be made despite the shortage of manpower’(Participant 12)
‘… I am always careful of dealing with aggressive patients, because both the medical staff and the patient may be injured, and legal issues may occur. Even if I’m the only one injured, the hospital will not take action to sort things out. Despite the increasing amount of stress the staff members experience, the quality of welfare and the working environment do not seem to improve’(Participant 2)
‘… Having reasonable judgment regarding a certain problem is important in any situation, but it doesn’t apply in real situations. In some situations, it is difficult for the medical staff to be understood, and I feel that the nurses have more restrictions than the patients. I think the nurses’ human rights are violated’(Participant 4)
3.2.3. Category 3. Difficulty Controlling Emotion
‘The patient was screaming and threatening me using curse words. I forgot my role as a therapist at that moment, and I yelled back at the patient’(Participant 1)
‘… When the patient insulted me, I continued to stay calm as if I was testing my own personal limits. By the time my emotions could no longer remain calm, I became violent as well when restraining the patient’(Participant 4)
‘… Dealing with anger is inevitable. Sometimes I feel angry, become compulsive, and fight back’(Participant 8)
‘… Although dealing with a violent situation imposes an emotional burden, I was able to stay calm by suppressing my anger’(Participant 2)
‘… I try to stay as rational as possible and not be biased’(Participant 4)
‘… I think that the violence occurs because they are psychiatric patients, and I try to control myself and see the therapeutic side only’(Participant 8)
3.2.4. Category 4. Career Regrets
‘As the process of dealing with violence repeated, my self-esteem went down, and I lost my commitment and enthusiasm for this job. I think I need to get out of this job soon’(Participant 1)
‘After experiencing violence from the patients, I was humiliated, ashamed, and depressed. I felt so regretful about my job that I even considered changing my career’(Participant 2)
‘After losing my pride as a nurse, I felt a strong desire to do something other than being a nurse. My self-esteem went far down, and I was constantly feeling downhearted and depressed, which made me question my abilities. I also felt as if I was left alone and isolated from society, fearing no one would understand my feelings with sympathy’(Participant 4)
‘When dealing with patients with anger and aggressive behavior, I am concerned that it [violent event] will repeatedly occur in other similar situations’(Participant 8)
‘Having confronted verbal violence on a daily basis, my perspective of a patient has changed from a person who inspires a desire to help them as a clinician to a person toward whom I feel fear and hatred, wishing to avoid them on my duty. Due to the frequent admission and discharge of these patients, it is hard to sincerely wish them well’(Participant 1)
‘I had a patient who threatened to file a lawsuit against the hospital for overly aggressive restraint, and the hospital reluctantly compensated them with a settlement. Justifying his behavior, the patient bragged about the result to others, and I decided to leave my workplace and move to a different workplace in another region’(Participant 5)
3.2.5. Category 5. Finding a Solution to Violence
‘Restraint and medical treatment are essential clinical processes for patients to overcome further expressions of anger, and once this moment is over, we can then proceed to the next stage of having a conversation with the patient’(Participant 11)
‘I’ve seen patients become calm after medication. After isolation, restraint, and drug injection in the acute stage of violence, it is important to have a consultation taking into considering the variation of the patient’s clinical condition’(Participant 12)
‘We need to figure out ways to complement frequent admission and discharge of patients during the treatment process. It is best to cope with the patients by understanding the characteristics of psychiatric patients, which are verbal violence, temporary failure of emotional control, and immediate remorse after such violence, and forgiving them with generosity’(Participant 1)
‘Isolation and medical treatment in psychiatric hospitalization may be effective in some cases. The most important process, however, is helping patients with sincerity through profound consultation and reducing their stresses or the pain they might have experienced in their family relationships’(Participant 6)
‘At first, I feel threatened and hurt when the patients demonstrated violence, but as time passed, I soon got to feel a sense of compassion towards them’(Participant 7)
‘When a patient failed to control their emotion and demonstrated aggressiveness, it was less challenging to provide nursing intervention to that patient, especially with those whom I had built rapport in advance’(Participant 8)
‘Aging, on the one hand, might be a disadvantage. Being older, on the other hand, allows me to understand and embrace any type of situation’(Participant 3)
‘Having abundant lifetime experience itself is a major plus to work as a psychiatric nurse. I believe a clinician with extensive experience has a better understanding of the patient’s behavior’(Participant 6)
‘Without much work experience, I had a hard time dealing with angry patients sometimes. As I gained further experience, I was able to stay calm, take control of my emotions, and managed to take care of the patients’ emotions’(Participant 11)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant No. | Gender | Age | Work Place | Employment Period/Year | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hospital Career | Psychiatric Ward Career | ||||
1 | Female | 48 | Hospital B | 6 | 3 |
2 | Female | 35 | Hospital Y | 6 | 2 |
3 | Male | 46 | Hospital A | 20 | 15 |
4 | Female | 39 | Hospital A | 13 | 11 |
5 | Female | 60 | Hospital B | 32 | 7 |
6 | Female | 61 | Hospital B | 40 | 5 |
7 | Female | 63 | Hospital S | 10 | 10 |
8 | Male | 26 | Hospital C | 3 | 3 |
9 | Female | 60 | Hospital S | 10 | 3 |
10 | Female | 60 | Hospital Y | 8 | 6 |
11 | Female | 65 | Hospital B | 15 | 18 |
12 | Female | 58 | Hospital T | 25 | 4 |
Category | Themes | Meaningful Statements |
---|---|---|
1. Fear of violence | Difficulty dealing with violence in the acute stage | Wanting to escape from violence due to safety concerns |
Waiting for the violence to subside | ||
Nurses’ actions in response to patients restricted | ||
Experiencing unexpected physical violence | The patient’s compulsive act of violence: hitting the nurse’s face with their legs | |
Lacking the establishment of rapport / bitten or stoned by patients | ||
Threatened by an angry patient with a knife | ||
Repeated violence hurting the soul | Wounded feelings, shocked by the violence | |
Feeling threatened when the patient becomes violent | ||
2. Placed in a poor working environment | Experience with the irrationality of the hospital structure | Resentment of a poor environment due to heavy workload and stress |
Angered by patients claiming violation of their rights using hospital regulations that protect them | ||
A problematic work environment characterized by making a profit with low manpower | ||
Violation of human rights | The process of dealing with violence may raise legal issues | |
Nurses feel more restricted than the patients | ||
3. Difficulty controlling emotion | Negative empathy with the patient | Yelling back at the patient while forgetting role as a nurse |
Failure to control emotion, resulting in compulsive patient restraint and isolation | ||
Emotional damage is inevitable, feels the urge to fight back | ||
Staying calm | Experiences emotional burden, but suppresses feelings and maintains calm as a nurse | |
Continues to stay professional and behave rationally | ||
Controlling emotions and recognizing the therapeutic aspects | ||
4. Career Regrets | Skepticism about the job | Loss of self-esteem and a sense of duty |
Feeling depressed and hopeless | ||
Feeling disconnected and isolated from society | ||
Concern about recurrent situation | ||
Feeling of avoiding the patient | Feeling fear and hatred towards violent patients and considering them as avoid person | |
Having career-regret moments when seeing the elated patient after an act of violence | ||
5. Finding a solution to violence | Importance of restraint and medical treatment | At the moment of the patient’s violence, isolation is an essential treatment process considering the safety issue |
If violence occurs, patients should be isolated and given a medical injection. Consultations should be given afterwards considering the variations in patient clinical conditions | ||
Importance of building rapport | If a patient that shows violence has a well-established rapport with a nurse, they regret their behavior soon after | |
Experienced changes in patients when trying to care for their wounded emotions through in-depth consultation | ||
Over time, nurses feel a sense of compassion towards the patient | ||
Feasible nursing intervention specifically for patients with well-established rapport | ||
The importance of years of experience | As the nurses become older, they can more easily understand that the patient’s violence is due to their previous experience | |
Broad understanding of patients through years of experience | ||
As nurses gain more experience, they can stay calm and roll with the emotional changes of patients |
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Sim, I.O.; Ahn, K.M.; Hwang, E.J. Experiences of Psychiatric Nurses Who Care for Patients with Physical and Psychological Violence: A Phenomenological Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 5159. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17145159
Sim IO, Ahn KM, Hwang EJ. Experiences of Psychiatric Nurses Who Care for Patients with Physical and Psychological Violence: A Phenomenological Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(14):5159. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17145159
Chicago/Turabian StyleSim, In Ok, Kyoung Min Ahn, and Eun Jeong Hwang. 2020. "Experiences of Psychiatric Nurses Who Care for Patients with Physical and Psychological Violence: A Phenomenological Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 14: 5159. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17145159
APA StyleSim, I. O., Ahn, K. M., & Hwang, E. J. (2020). Experiences of Psychiatric Nurses Who Care for Patients with Physical and Psychological Violence: A Phenomenological Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(14), 5159. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17145159