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ABSTRACT: Purpose
Estimate the effect of nursing, shift, and patient characteristics on patients' aggression.Design and methods
Follow-up study on a closed psychiatric ward was performed to estimate the effect of nursing team characteristics and patient characteristics on the incidence of aggression.Findings
The incidence of aggression (n = 802 in sample) was lower in teams with >75% male nurses. Teams scoring high on extraversion experienced more verbal aggression and teams scoring high on neuroticism experienced more physical aggression. Younger patients and/or involuntarily admitted patients were more frequently aggressive.Practice implications
These findings could stimulate support for nurses to prevent aggression.
SUBMITTER: Doedens P
PROVIDER: S-EPMC9790403 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Oct
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Doedens Paul P Vermeulen Jentien J Ter Riet Gerben G Boyette Lindy-Lou LL Latour Corine C de Haan Lieuwe L
Perspectives in psychiatric care 20220503 4
<h4>Purpose</h4>Estimate the effect of nursing, shift, and patient characteristics on patients' aggression.<h4>Design and methods</h4>Follow-up study on a closed psychiatric ward was performed to estimate the effect of nursing team characteristics and patient characteristics on the incidence of aggression.<h4>Findings</h4>The incidence of aggression (n = 802 in sample) was lower in teams with >75% male nurses. Teams scoring high on extraversion experienced more verbal aggression and teams scorin ...[more]