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The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator

(1) Background: Healthcare workplace violence has been a focused issue in the whole world. The rate of the occurrence is pretty high in every country. The emergency room is a high risk and high frequency place for violence to occur. Under the medical service demands from people, it is quite easy to...

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Autores principales: Li, Jui-Hsuan, Chen, Ta-Wei, Lee, Hsiu-Fang, Shih, Whei-Mei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8145540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33924759
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050507
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author Li, Jui-Hsuan
Chen, Ta-Wei
Lee, Hsiu-Fang
Shih, Whei-Mei
author_facet Li, Jui-Hsuan
Chen, Ta-Wei
Lee, Hsiu-Fang
Shih, Whei-Mei
author_sort Li, Jui-Hsuan
collection PubMed
description (1) Background: Healthcare workplace violence has been a focused issue in the whole world. The rate of the occurrence is pretty high in every country. The emergency room is a high risk and high frequency place for violence to occur. Under the medical service demands from people, it is quite easy to bring about conflicts. This leads to serious physical and mental harm to nurses. When suffering from physical and mental injuries, resilience is a protective factor away from negative influence. It is rare to explore and study how the nurses’ resilience ability, workplace violence and turnover intention are related. Thus, the aim of this study is to understand resilience as a mediator effect in emergency nurses toward the workplace violence. (2) Methods: A cross-sectional survey study was used to collect information from emergency room nurses of a medical center in northern Taiwan. There were 132 samples in total. Three research instruments were included as follows: Hospital Workplace Violence Prevention Questionnaire, Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, and Turnover Intention Scale. Statistical analysis using t-test, ANOVA, Correlation, as well as Sobel test were used in this study. (3) Results: The results revealed that the average age was 29.5 ± 5.6. Almost 58% of nurses experienced workplace violence. Twelve percent of nurse had experienced physical violence and 53.8% had experienced mental violence. There was significant relationship between shift personnel and religious believers. To the people who suffered physical violence, there was a significant relationship between emergency room working years and the total working years. There was significant difference between those who had suffered mental violence and religious believers. Female nurses suffered mental violence to a much higher extent than male nurses. There was a significant relationship between nurses’ working years, the total working years, resilience, and turnover intention. Resilience was not the mediator for workplace violence toward turnover intention in this study. (4) Conclusions: The outcome of this study suggested that on an individual level, nurses can enhance self-protection and communication skills to decrease workplace violence. For emergency environment settings, designing a good working environment, visitors’ restriction, avoiding working alone, and enhancing supervising alarm system are recommended. As for hospital administrators, fitness for work and to set up a project team is necessary. These can be references in planning prevention on workplace violence and promoting quality of workplace and patient safety in the future.
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spelling pubmed-81455402021-05-26 The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator Li, Jui-Hsuan Chen, Ta-Wei Lee, Hsiu-Fang Shih, Whei-Mei Healthcare (Basel) Article (1) Background: Healthcare workplace violence has been a focused issue in the whole world. The rate of the occurrence is pretty high in every country. The emergency room is a high risk and high frequency place for violence to occur. Under the medical service demands from people, it is quite easy to bring about conflicts. This leads to serious physical and mental harm to nurses. When suffering from physical and mental injuries, resilience is a protective factor away from negative influence. It is rare to explore and study how the nurses’ resilience ability, workplace violence and turnover intention are related. Thus, the aim of this study is to understand resilience as a mediator effect in emergency nurses toward the workplace violence. (2) Methods: A cross-sectional survey study was used to collect information from emergency room nurses of a medical center in northern Taiwan. There were 132 samples in total. Three research instruments were included as follows: Hospital Workplace Violence Prevention Questionnaire, Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, and Turnover Intention Scale. Statistical analysis using t-test, ANOVA, Correlation, as well as Sobel test were used in this study. (3) Results: The results revealed that the average age was 29.5 ± 5.6. Almost 58% of nurses experienced workplace violence. Twelve percent of nurse had experienced physical violence and 53.8% had experienced mental violence. There was significant relationship between shift personnel and religious believers. To the people who suffered physical violence, there was a significant relationship between emergency room working years and the total working years. There was significant difference between those who had suffered mental violence and religious believers. Female nurses suffered mental violence to a much higher extent than male nurses. There was a significant relationship between nurses’ working years, the total working years, resilience, and turnover intention. Resilience was not the mediator for workplace violence toward turnover intention in this study. (4) Conclusions: The outcome of this study suggested that on an individual level, nurses can enhance self-protection and communication skills to decrease workplace violence. For emergency environment settings, designing a good working environment, visitors’ restriction, avoiding working alone, and enhancing supervising alarm system are recommended. As for hospital administrators, fitness for work and to set up a project team is necessary. These can be references in planning prevention on workplace violence and promoting quality of workplace and patient safety in the future. MDPI 2021-04-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8145540/ /pubmed/33924759 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050507 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Li, Jui-Hsuan
Chen, Ta-Wei
Lee, Hsiu-Fang
Shih, Whei-Mei
The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title_full The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title_fullStr The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title_short The Effects of Emergency Room Violence toward Nurse′s Intention to Leave—Resilience as a Mediator
title_sort effects of emergency room violence toward nurse′s intention to leave—resilience as a mediator
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8145540/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33924759
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9050507
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