TY - JOUR PY - 2017// TI - De-escalation training to medical-surgical nurses in the acute care setting JO - Issues in mental health nursing A1 - Ferrara, Kimberly Lynn A1 - Davis-Ajami, Mary Lynn A1 - Warren, Joan Insalaco A1 - Murphy, Lyn Stankiewicz SP - 742 EP - 749 VL - 38 IS - 9 N2 - Violence is increasing on medical-surgical units as a "silent epidemic." This quality improvement project employs a small non-experimental, single-group, pre- and post-test design (N = 11) to determine the effectiveness of de-escalation training on medical-surgical nurses' confidence levels when dealing with agitated patients. Regardless of age, education, or years of experience, scores improved for each question on Thackrey's (1987) Confidence in Coping with Patient Aggression Instrument after implementing Ten Domains of De-escalation by Richmond et al. (2012). A paired-sample two-tailed t-test significantly increased from Time 1 pre-test (M = 49.82, SD = 10.11) to Time 2 post-test (M = 72.82, SD = 14.41), t(10) = 4.46, p <.001. The mean increase was 23.00 [95% CI, 11.51-34.49]; d = 1.84 indicating a large effect size (Pilot, 2010). A sensitivity analysis (Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test) showed a median difference among the matched pairs with a significant increase in confidence levels post-training, z = -2.847, p <.004. The median score increased from the pre-test (Md = 51) to the post-test scores (Md = 71) (Pallant, 2013).

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0161-2840 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01612840.2017.1335363 ID - ref1 ER -