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Journal Article

Citation

Fry AJ, O'Riordan D, Turner M, Mills KL. Int. J. Ment. Health Nurs. 2002; 11(2): 112-120.

Affiliation

Blacktown City Mental Health Service and the School of Nursing, Family and Community Health, University of Western Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. anne.fry@uws.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Australian College of Mental Health Nurses Inc., Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12430192

Abstract

The phenomenon of aggression experienced by community mental health staff is explored in the present study. Qualitative and quantitative data were elicited in a self-report questionnaire completed by 92 community mental health workers from a metropolitan Area Health Service. Findings indicate that 96% of community mental health workers experienced some form of aggression in the course of their work, 25% felt that their life had been threatened and 7% sustained physical injuries. Issues in need of attention are the normalization of aggression and subsequent lack of incident reporting, and the appropriateness of staff safety training for community mental health settings.


Language: en

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