| Title | Potential for violence toward psychiatric nursing students: risk reduction techniques. | | Author(s) | Echternacht MR | | Institution | Central Community College, Grand Island, Nebraska 68802-4903, USA. | | Source | J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv 1999 Mar; 37(3):36-9. | | MeSH | Disabled Persons Female Humans Male Psychiatric Nursing Safety Management Students, Nursing United States United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration Violence Wounds and Injuries
| | Abstract | 1. Nursing students could be vulnerable targets of violence in their psychiatric nursing clinical rotations by virtue of their predominant gender, and meek, insecure attitudes. 2. Nurses are taught to put the patients' needs first and students may blame themselves or minimize situations where they have been threatened or assaulted by a patient. Priority consideration must also be given to our own safety and that of our students, given the risk for occupational injury in the nursing workplace. 3. Affiliating agencies may restrict disabled students from patient care areas. Allowing a disabled student to participate in a clinical rotation on a psychiatric unit could put staff at unnecessary risk of violence if called on to protect the vulnerable student. | | Language | eng | | Pub Type(s) | Journal Article Review
| | PubMed ID | 10098110 |
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