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Erkan Tulay - - 2011
Erkan T, Fındık UY, Tokuc B. International Journal of Nursing Practice 2011; 17: 464-469 Hand-washing behaviour and nurses' knowledge after a training programme The aim of this study was to evaluate the nurses' hand-washing behaviour and knowledge before and after a training programme. This prospective study involved 200 nurses who ...
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Reilly Janet E Resop - - 2011
Encouraging nurses to go back to school can augment this workforce.
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Morrissette Patrick J - - 2010
Historically, the education and training of psychiatric nurses in Canada have only been available within a psychiatric institutional setting or community college. This trend, however, has experienced a recent shift with the establishment of a Canadian undergraduate programme. This development is symbolic of the profession's evolution and serves three primary ...
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Koukia Evmorfia - - 2010
Mental health nurses play a key role in maintaining the safety of patients, themselves, and others during hospitalization. The aim of the research was to evaluate the safety measures that are taken by mental health nurses to identify the security policies that exist in acute mental health wards. The Ward ...
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Ohnishi Kayoko - - 2010
This study aimed to: (1) develop and evaluate the Moral Distress Scale for Psychiatric nurses (MDS-P); (2) use the MDS-P to examine the moral distress experienced by Japanese psychiatric nurses; and (3) explore the correlation between moral distress and burnout. A questionnaire on the intensity and frequency of moral distress ...
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Holman E Alison - - 2010
Nurses often help patients cope with loss. Recent research has cast doubt on the validity of early theories about loss and grief commonly taught to nurses. We systematically examined the accuracy of information on coping with loss presented in 23 commonly used undergraduate psychiatric nursing books. All 23 books contained ...
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Holman E Alison - - 2010
Nurses often help patients cope with loss. Recent research has cast doubt on the validity of early theories about loss and grief commonly taught to nurses. We systematically examined the accuracy of information on coping with loss presented in 23 commonly used undergraduate psychiatric nursing books. All 23 books contained ...
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Engqvist Inger - - 2010
The concept of nursing presence has been widely used in nursing and is a significant component of nursing practice. In order to increase our understanding of nursing presence, it needs to be studied in different contexts. In this study, a secondary analysis of interviews with 10 registered psychiatric nurses (RPN) ...
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Landeweer Elleke G M - - 2010
In this article, we focus on core values of psychiatric nurses in relation to coercion and constraint. We analyze changes that took place in a project aiming at reducing coercion at a closed inpatient ward of a psychiatric hospital. Using the philosophy of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Margaret Urban Walker, we ...
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Buus Niels - - 2010
Group-based clinical supervision is commonly offered as a stress-reducing intervention in psychiatric settings, but nurses often feel ambivalent about participating. This study aimed at exploring psychiatric nurses' experiences of participating in group-based supervision and identifying psychosocial reasons for their ambivalence. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 22 psychiatric nurses at a ...
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Timmons D - - 2010
The Central Mental Hospital is one of the oldest high secure mental health services in Europe dating back to 1845 but has been one of the last to introduce (forensic) psychiatric nurses. This paper describes the role of psychiatric nurses working in this high secure psychiatric facility in Ireland. The ...
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Loukidou E - - 2010
For centuries psychiatric services were provided by mental health hospitals, which were operating upon bureaucratic principles: strict hierarchies, slow processes and segmentation of duties. Research has shown that psychiatric nursing, as exercised in these traditional settings, has dealt with several problems in relation to: the amount and quality of time ...
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Deady Rick - - 2010
The purpose of this study was to investigate moral distress in Irish psychiatric nurses. A qualitative descriptive methodology was used. The study confirmed the presence of moral distress and the situations that gave rise to moral distress within psychiatric nurses working in acute care settings. The findings indicate that while ...
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Wilson D W - - 2010
Evidence-based descriptions of culturally competent psychiatric nursing care are scarce. This study explored the perceptions of clients with mental illness regarding the overall effectiveness of psychiatric nursing care in meeting their cultural needs, and psychiatric nurses' perceptions of how and to what extent they provided culturally competent psychiatric mental health ...
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Chen Wen-Ching - - 2010
To clarify the relationship of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) to workplace physical violence (WPV) against nurses by psychiatric patients. A Web-based WHOQOL-BREF was used to assess HRQoL and an intranet Workplace Violence Report System was used to record WPV incidents in order to design prospective longitudinal repeat measures over ...
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Hanrahan Nancy P - - 2010
Although general hospitals receive nearly 60% of all inpatient psychiatric admissions, little is known about the care environment and related adverse events. The purpose of this study was to determine the occurrence of adverse events and examine the extent to which organizing factors of inpatient psychiatric care environments were associated ...
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Humble Felicity - - 2010
Concern regarding the low numbers of graduate nurses expressing interest in entering the psychiatric field leads to the question: who would be a psychiatric nurse? In this interpretative, phenomenological study, the lived experiences of seven veteran psychiatric nurses were examined in order to gain understanding of the reasons why they ...
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Hanrahan Nancy P - - 2010
Following deinstitutionalization, inpatient psychiatric services moved from state institutions to general hospitals. Despite the magnitude of these changes, evaluations of the quality of inpatient care environments in general hospitals are limited. This study examined the extent to which organizational factors of the inpatient psychiatric environments are associated with psychiatric nurse ...
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McGuinness Teena M - - 2010
There is a pressing need for psychiatric nurse authors to write about their professional image as well as issues they face in clinical practice. In this article, two psychiatric nurses describe how using Covey's The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change can serve as a ...
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Biley F C - - 2009
Fundamental differences in the philosophy of history as an academic discipline are briefly explored, primarily from two perspectives. The traditional psychiatric and mental health nursing historian objectively uses primary sources in order to be able to make 'truth' claims about the past. The post-modern psychiatric nursing historian, on the other ...
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Gelkopf Marc - - 2009
Physical restraints are used as a psychiatric intervention to protect psychiatric inpatients from self-harm or harm to others, by securing a safe environment for the patients and staff. We examined nurses' attitudes, environmental concerns, and emotional responses to physical restraint of psychiatric inpatients, using a questionnaire we constructed expressly for ...
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Koekkoek B - - 2009
The aim of this paper is to describe and analyse the Dutch community psychiatric nursing profession. In spite of their large numbers, estimated at 2900, Dutch community psychiatric nurses (CPNs) have contributed little to the international literature. The history of the profession reveals a relatively isolated development, resulting in few ...
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Valente Sharon - - 2010
BACKGROUND: The time before dying can be extremely challenging and stressful. Gaps in end-of-life care include inadequate communication, education about end-of-life options, symptom control, and management of common mental illnesses (eg, mood disorders, dementia), and death anxiety. Psychiatric nurses are in a pivotal position to help address these gaps and ...
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Bimenyimana E - - 2009
Caring for good people is difficult enough; to care for people who are either aggressive or violent is even more difficult. This is what psychiatric nurses working in the psychiatric institution in which research was done are exposed to on a daily basis. The aim of the research was to ...
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Lindsey Pamela L - - 2009
The use of restraints in all health care settings has come under increased scrutiny in recent years. Although the organizational context has been suggested as a possible influence on restraint use, few researchers have examined whether organizational factors affect use of restraints and nurses' decisions to restrain patients hospitalized in ...
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Kameg Kirstyn - - 2009
Communication is an integral component of nursing education and has been shown to improve health outcomes, patient compliance, and patient satisfaction. Psychiatric nursing emphasizes knowledge and utilization of communication skills. Nursing students often express anxiety and lack of confidence regarding communicating with patients diagnosed with psychiatric illnesses. Human patient simulation ...
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Ishii Shinya - - 2009
Apathy, or a lack of motivation, has been increasingly recognized as a distinct psychiatric syndrome. Apathy is primarily a dysfunction of the frontal-subcortical circuit and is associated with various neuropsychiatric disorders including Alzheimer's disease. Apathy is associated with a number of adverse outcomes, including apparent cognitive impairment, decreased daily function, ...
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Thamlikitkul Sangtien - - 2009
OBJECTIVE: To explore and understand the nursing practice processes of psychiatric nurses for school-aged sexually abused children admitted to psychiatric wards. MATERIAL AND METHOD: Grounded theory approach. Twelve psychiatric nurses, aged between 35-59 years old, experienced with sexually abused child patients, participated in the present study Data was collected by ...
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Giannouli H - - 2009
The objectives of this study is to determine the knowledge, attitudes and experience of psychiatric nurses regarding clients with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and to compare nurses working in Psychiatric Hospitals with those in Psychiatric Clinics of General Hospitals. The study was performed in two public Psychiatric Hospitals and the ...
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Zolnierek Cindy Diamond - - 2009
AIM: This paper is a report of a literature review of the evidence regarding outcomes experienced by severely mentally ill individuals hospitalized in general medical-surgical settings for non-psychiatric conditions. BACKGROUND: Severely mentally ill individuals experience chronic medical illnesses at a rate greater than the general population. When hospitalized in non-psychiatric ...
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Dewar Anne - - 2009
How do psychiatric nurses make decisions about pain management for hospitalized psychiatric patients? This is the question addressed by this research. Using an exploratory, naturalistic interview approach, 20 nurses and managers in varied settings described their decision making when providing pain relief. Analysis of these narratives indicates that decision making ...
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Koivunen Marita - - 2010
Nursing professionals have long recognized the importance to practice of research and the value of research evidence. Nurses still do not use research findings in practice. The purpose of this paper was to describe nurses' skills in using literature databases and the Internet in psychiatric hospitals and associations of nurses' ...
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Hicks, Beverley
ABSTRACT FROM BARNYARDS TO BEDSIDES TO BOOKS AND BEYOND: THE EVOLUTION AND PROFESSIONALIZATION OF REGISTERED PSYCHIATRIC NURSING IN MANITOBA, 1955-1980 In the 1950s, psychiatric nursing in Canada was developing into two models. East of Manitoba, psychiatric nursing was a part of general nursing. To the west of Manitoba, it was ...
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Vuckovich Paula K - - 2009
Nurses seem to play an important role in assisting involuntarily hospitalized psychiatric patients to accept medication. The initial aim of this study was to develop a theoretical understanding of strategies nurses use to overcome medication non-acceptance in involuntary psychiatric patients using a grounded theory approach. Interviews (n = 17) were ...
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Aloi J A - - 2009
Grief that occurs as a result of relinquishing an infant for adoption is explored. Traditional grief models are cited as ineffectual for the satisfactory resolution of grief resulting from the relinquishment of a child for adoption. The reasons for disenfranchised grief are described and narratives of personal interviews provide insight ...
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Missouridou E - - 2009
This paper aims to explore the evolution of psychiatric nursing from the delayed organization of an asylum mental health system in Greece to the present. The care and custody of mental health patients which was in the hands of police at the first asylum passed to the hands of uneducated ...
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Hardy Lyons T - - 2009
Encopresis is an elimination disorder that involves symptoms of fecal incontinence in children. It affects an estimated 1.5% to 7.5% of children ages 6 to 12 and accounts for approximately 3% to 6% of psychiatric referrals. The etiology of encopresis is thought to be related to physiologic problems such as ...
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Karlowicz Karen A - - 2009
AIM: To explore the work experiences of psychiatric-registered nurses (RNs) that influence retention within the first year of employment. BACKGROUND: One corporation with four psychiatric inpatient facilities experienced an average RN turnover rate of 54% annually, with approximately 75% of new hires leaving within 6 months of employment. METHODS: This ...
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Engqvist Inger - - 2009
Postpartum psychosis is the most serious type of psychiatric illness related to childbirth. This interview study with nine psychiatric nurses in Sweden explored psychiatric nurses' descriptions of women with psychosis occurring in the postpartum period and nurses' responses when providing care to these women. Content analysis was used to analyze ...
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Salerno Silvana - - 2009
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to elucidate causes of aggression from clinical records of a psychiatric ward of a major urban public hospital where aggression towards Health Care Workers [HCWs] was the second leading cause of hospital work-related injuries after needlesticks. METHODS: Psychiatric patients'clinical records for the period 2002-2005 were examined ...
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Jacob Jean Daniel - - 2009
Forensic psychiatric nurses work with individuals who may evoke feelings of empathy as well as feelings of disgust, repulsion, and fear. The main objective of this theoretical paper is to engage the readers in a theoretical reflection regarding the concepts of abjection and fear since they both apply to the ...
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Kobayashi Sumiko - - 2009
In the nursing process patients are understood holistically, based on a knowledge system unique to nursing, and patient problems are resolved systematically and logically. However, because problems in the patient are assumed, the focus in psychiatric nursing tends to shift toward the impaired aspect or problem rather than the healthy ...
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Weber Mary - - 2009
PURPOSE: Progression of metabolic illness in a patient with schizophrenia who was stabilized on an atypical antipsychotic is described using a case study framework. Risks and benefits of staying on current treatment versus switching to another agent and switching strategies are described. CONCLUSIONS: Switching an antipsychotic with more favorable side ...
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Chen Chun-Hsi Vivian - - 2008
This study examined from a social exchange perspective the influence of leader-member exchange (LMX) on the trust of subordinates in their supervisors as well as their perception of support received from their medical organization supervisors and the subsequent effect of such on organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) in subordinates. Two hundred ...
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Helene Hem Marit - - 2008
The ideal of trust pervades nursing. This article uses empirical material from acute psychiatry that reveals that it is distrust rather than trust that is prevalent in this field. Our data analyses show how distrust is expressed in the therapeutic environment and in the relationship between nurse and patient. We ...
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Gerolamo Angela M - - 2009
Although research exists relative to psychiatric nurses' perceptions of their work conditions, the relationship between nurses' perceptions of their workloads and the activities in which they engage has been unexplored. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between unit activity and nurses' perceptions of their workloads. The ...
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Buus Niels - - 2009
Through the practices of recording, psychiatric nurses produce clinical knowledge about the patients in their care. The objective of this study was to examine the conventionalized practices of recording among psychiatric nurses and the typical linguistic organization of their records. The study drew on data from an extended fieldwork on ...
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Brown J F - - 2008
The purpose of this paper is to review the use of simulation in education across the health professionals, to describe the development and implementation of innovative simulation techniques for an undergraduate psychiatric mental-health nursing course, and to identify lessons learned and future directions for successful simulation experiences in psychiatric nursing.
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Prebble Kate - - 2008
Abstract Histories of twentieth century nursing usually present 'general nursing' as the norm and make the assumption that nursing was a female-dominated profession in which men were a marginalised minority. In this article, we argue that in New Zealand, psychiatric nursing had developed a distinct culture from general nursing, was ...
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Selbaek Geir - - 2008
BACKGROUND: In a number of countries Special Care Units (SCUs) have been established to meet the particular needs of patients with dementia. The criteria for SCUs are poorly defined and often not met. AIM: To assess the frequency distributions of dementia, psychiatric and behavioural symptoms and the use of psychotropic ...
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