Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2646180 Collegian 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryBackgroundThe prevalence of violent acts in the health care environment has been the cause of increasing concern. Several cues associated with violence towards nurses in the acute care setting have been identified qualitatively. However, larger scale observational studies to determine the potential of these cues to predict physical violence, are lacking in the acute health setting.PurposeTo report an observational study determining whether particular behavioural cues are predictive of patient-to-nurse physical violence.MethodNon-participant structured observations.DiscussionClinical observation (n = 1150 h) resulted in 1501 observed cues for violence in 220 patients; 36 of whom were observed to become violent. Five (5) behavioural cues were found to predict violent acts.ConclusionsFindings suggest five behavioural cues could be used to assess potential physical violence. Additional research needs to be undertaken to further validate the efficacy of these cues in the acute hospital setting.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, , ,