Nurses’ understanding of their duty of confidentiality to patients in mental health care : A qualitative exploratory study

Journal article


Conlon, Darren, Raeburn, Toby and Wand, Timothy. (2024). Nurses’ understanding of their duty of confidentiality to patients in mental health care : A qualitative exploratory study. Collegian : The Australian Journal of Nursing Practice, Scholarship and Research. 31(3), pp. 144-153. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colegn.2024.02.002
AuthorsConlon, Darren, Raeburn, Toby and Wand, Timothy
Abstract

Background: There are significant personal repercussions for patients, and professional, legal, financial, or reputational repercussions for stakeholders, when confidential patient information is mishandled by nurses working in mental health care. Education and guidance would be helpful for nurses, to address any knowledge or practice gaps related to their duty of confidentiality to patients, but there is limited empirical literature exploring their understanding of this important area of nursing practice to guide these interventions.

Aim: To explore nurses’ understanding of their duty of confidentiality to patients in mental health care.

Methods: Theoretical thematic analysis employing a deductive approach to coding of interview data.

Findings: Nurses have a general knowledge of the concept of confidentiality and its rules, but this knowledge is often incomplete or incorrect. Nonetheless, they recognise and prioritise patients’ interests when considering how confidential information should be handled, whilst also demonstrating awareness of potential risks to patients if their mental health information becomes known to others.

Discussion: Nurses’ understanding of their duty of confidentiality is based on information and knowledge that is incomplete or incorrect. However, in general, they are genuinely motivated to protect the interests of patients and other stakeholders. Several key knowledge and practice gaps that would benefit from education and guidance have been identified. Addressing these gaps should lead to improvements in nurses’ handling of confidential patient information.

Conclusion: Confidentiality is an integral element of good mental health care. Findings from this qualitative exploratory study will lead to the development of nurse education and guidance that will assist nurses to thoroughly understand the duty of confidentiality they owe to their patients. Consequently, these findings have the potential to safeguard patients against the mishandling of their personal information by nurses and protect other stakeholders (including nurses) from consequential, personal, professional, legal, or financial repercussions. Further research in this area of practice would also enhance the findings of this study.

KeywordsConfidentiality; Education ; Mental health ; Nurse Psychiatric nursing ; Social stigma
Year01 Jan 2024
JournalCollegian : The Australian Journal of Nursing Practice, Scholarship and Research
Journal citation31 (3), pp. 144-153
PublisherElsevier Australia
ISSN1322-7696
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1016/j.colegn.2024.02.002
Web address (URL)https://www.collegianjournal.com/article/S1322-7696(24)00003-9/fulltext
Open accessOpen access
Research or scholarlyResearch
Page range144-153
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Online08 Mar 2024
Publication process dates
Accepted14 Feb 2024
Deposited05 Sep 2024
Additional information

Copyright: © 2024 Australian College of Nursing Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

Place of publicationNetherlands
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