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Journal Article

Citation

Ezeobele IE, Mock A, McBride R, Mackey-Godine A, Harris D, Russell CD, Lane SD. Can. J. Nurs. Res. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, UTHealth McGovern Medical School, Houston, TX, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, McGill University School of Nursing, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0844562120904624

PMID

32052639

Abstract

Introduction
Physical assaults perpetrated by patients in psychiatric hospitals against mental health staff (MHS) is a serious concern facing psychiatric hospitals. Assaulted staff reports physical and psychological trauma that affects their personal and professional lives. There is a dearth of literature exploring this phenomenon.

Purpose
To explore MHS perspectives of assault by psychiatric patients.

Methods
A transcendental phenomenological qualitative design was used to explore and analyze the perspectives of a purposeful sample of 120 MHS perspectives at an acute inpatient psychiatric hospital. Participants’ age ranged from 22 to 63 years (mean age = 32.4). Moustakas’ theoretical underpinnings guided the study.

Results
Two patterns, 8 themes, and 19 subthemes were identified: (a) Psychological impacts revealed four themes—increase of anxiety/fear level, helplessness and hopelessness, flashbacks/burnout, and doubting own competency. (b) Physiosocial impacts revealed four themes—unsupportive superiors, stigmatization of staff victim, failure to report the incident, and environmental safety.

Discussion
Participants verbalized that assaults by patients have instilled fear and trauma in them. Most of the assaults occurred when staff were performing their routine job functions and setting limits to patient’s behavior.

Conclusion
The study allowed MHS opportunities to narrate their lived experiences of being assaulted by patients and provided validation of their perspectives. Findings illuminated the phenomenon and may help to support policy changes in psychiatric hospitals.

Keywords Experience, mental health staff, transcendental phenomenology, physical assault, staff perspectives, safety environment


Language: en

Keywords

Experience; mental health staff; physical assault; safety environment; staff perspectives; transcendental phenomenology

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