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Journal Article

Citation

Wang L, Xu J, Zou H, Zhang H, Qu Y. Arch. Psychiatr. Nurs. 2019; 33(6): 167-176.

Affiliation

School of Nursing, Peking Union Medical College, 33 Badachu Road, Beijing 100144, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.apnu.2019.08.009

PMID

31753224

Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to investigate the current situation of violence on primary caregivers of people with severe mental illness outside the hospital and the cognition of primary caregivers about violence among mental patients.

METHODS: A self-designed questionnaire was used to investigate the primary caregivers (N = 208) of people with severe mental illness in a psychiatric hospital in Beijing.

RESULTS: The incidence rate of violence suffered by primary caregivers was 74.03%, of which 61.54% had experienced verbal attacks, 54.33% had experienced threats, and 45.19% experienced physical attacks. Physical violence, mainly by unarmed attacks, has resulted in soft tissue injury and pain in the majority of caregivers. Multiple admission times, a lower educational level, single in marital status and involuntary hospitalizations were risk factors; growing older was protective factor. The causes of violence were dominated by mental symptoms in 120 cases (57.69%). Tolerance and avoidance were the coping styles of most caregivers adopted after violence, accounting for 51.44%. Furthermore, most of primary caregivers have limited knowledge of violence and adopted an attitude of pessimism towards patients' violence.

CONCLUSIONS: It was reported that violence was suffered by primary caregivers of persons with severe mental illness outside the hospital. The study indicated that formulating reasonable nursing intervention, providing health education as well as organizing training towards violence of patients are required to play an important role in effectively preventing and reducing the violence among the people with severe mental illness in China. More information and support needs to be obtained to help caregivers fulfill their duty of care outside the hospital.

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Attitudes; Caregivers; China; Knowledge; Severe mental illness; Violence

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