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Journal Article

Citation

Bekelepi N, Martin P. Curationis 2023; 46(1): e1-e8.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Democratic Nursing Organisation of South Africa)

DOI

10.4102/curationis.v46i1.2350

PMID

37403668

Abstract

BACKGROUND:  Acute psychiatric units are found to be stressful working environments because of the nature of illness patients present with.

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to determine self-reported incidents of physical and verbal violence towards nurses working in acute psychiatric units in Western Cape, South Africa.

METHOD:  A questionnaire was used to collect data. Chi-square test was performed to determine association between gender, category and experience of violence. Mann-Whitney U test was carried out to determine associations between years of employment and the likelihood of experiencing physical violence and verbal abuse.

RESULTS:  Overall physical violence 35 (34.3%) and verbal abuse 83 (83%) incidents. Most female respondents reported both physical violence (74.2%, n = 26) and verbal abuse (72.2%, n = 60), with (56.2%, n = 18) professional nurses reporting physical violence. Years of employment was statistically significantly associated with the likelihood of nurses experiencing physical violence (p = 0.007).

CONCLUSION:  Most respondents (74.2%, n = 26) were females and they mostly experienced physical violence and verbal abuse while 28.2% (n = 29) were males. Years of service were associated with the likelihood of experiencing physical violence.Contribution: The knowledge gained will add on existing knowledge about the challenge of violence experienced by nurses in the workplace and might have an influence on policymakers.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Female; Male; Surveys and Questionnaires; Workplace; Self Report; *Violence; *Nurses; acute psychiatric unit, nurses, physical violence, verbal abuse, violent incidents

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