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Medical and surgical nurses' experiences of modifying and implementing contextually suitable Safewards interventions into medical and surgical hospital wards
Luck, Lauretta ; Kaczorowski, Kellie ; White, Melissa ; Dickens, Geoffrey ; McDermid, Fiona
Luck, Lauretta
Kaczorowski, Kellie
White, Melissa
Dickens, Geoffrey
McDermid, Fiona
Abstract
Aim
To explore general nurses' experiences of modifying and implementing contextually suitable Safewards interventions into medical and surgical hospital wards.
Design
Qualitative action research was used working with nurses as co-researchers.
Methods
Pre-implementation focus groups were conducted in April 2022 to understand and explore the current strategies nurses utilized to avert, respond to or decrease violence. Following this, two Safewards interventions were modified by the nurses on the wards. Post-implementation focus groups were conducted in October 2022, to explore the nurses' experience of implementing Safewards interventions and the effect on their nursing practice. Data were analysed using Braun and Clarke's framework for thematic analysis.
Results
Three themes emerged from the analysis of the pre-implementation focus groups that reflected the type of violence experienced by these nurses and the context within which they occurred: ‘the space is hectic’; ‘it can feel like a battlefield’; and ‘the aftermath’. These themes encompass the nurses' experience of violence from patients and their visitors. Following the implementation of two modified Safewards interventions, the analysis of the focus groups reflected a change in nursing skills to avert or respond to violence: ‘Safewards in action’; ‘empathy and self-reflection’; and ‘moving forward’.
Conclusion
Safewards interventions can be successfully modified and used in general hospital wards and influence nursing practice to manage patient and visitor violence.
Implications for the Profession
In the interests of safety, successful interventions to reduce violence towards general hospital nurses should be a priority for managers and healthcare organizations. Averting, mitigating and managing violence can decrease the negative professional and personal effect on nurses and ultimately improve well-being, job satisfaction and retention rates. Furthermore, decreasing violence or aggressive incidents leads to a safer patient experience and decreased number of nursing errors ultimately improving patient experiences and outcomes.
Understanding nurses' experiences of violence and working with them to explore and develop contextually relevant solutions increases their capacity to respond to and avert violent incidents. Contextually modified Safewards interventions offer one such solution and potentially has wider implications for healthcare settings beyond the specific wards studied.
Impact
• This study addressed the implementation of modified Safewards strategies in medical and surgical wards to prevent violence.
• Three themes emerged from the analysis of the pre-implementation focus groups that reflected the type of violence experienced by these nurses and the context within which they occurred.
• Following the implementation of two modified Safewards interventions, the post-implementation focus groups reported positive changes to their practices using the modified resources to prevent violence from patients and their visitors.
• Mental health interventions, such as those used in the Safewards model can be modified and provide a tool kit of interventions that can be used by medical and surgical nurses.
Reporting Method
This paper has adhered to the COREQ guidelines.
Patient or Public Contribution
No patient or public contribution.
What Does this Paper Contribute to the wider Global Clinical Community?
• This paper outlines and discusses the action research approach undertaken to work with general hospital nurses to modify mental health nurses' Safewards interventions into their clinical practice.
• This paper provides evidence of the ‘real world’ application of Safewards interventions by medical and surgical nurses in general hospital wards.
• This paper presents qualitative findings based on focus group methods to highlight the narratives of general nurses and their experiences of violence.
Keywords
action research, focus groups, medical nursing, qualitative approaches, surgical nursing, workplace violence
Date
2024
Type
Journal article
Journal
Journal of Advanced Nursing
Book
Volume
80
Issue
11
Page Range
4639-4653
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine
Faculty of Health Sciences
Faculty of Health Sciences
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
Published as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
File Access
Open
Notes
© 2024 The Authors. Journal of Advanced Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
