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Tougher laws, too few prosecutions? A mixed methods study of nurses' experiences regarding the reporting of occupational violence to the police

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COLLEGIAN
卷 30, 期 5, 页码 686-692

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.colegn.2023.08.003

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Assault; Criminal law; Hospital management; Nursing; Occupational violence; Policy

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This study identified several barriers for nurses to report and prosecute assaultive patients in Australia. The barriers point to a strong imperative for organisations and police to fulfil their responsibilities to enable and support assaulted nurses to prosecute.
Problem: Assaults on nurses by patients are common. To deter occupational violence against nurses, as-saults attract penalties of longer imprisonment in many jurisdictions (domestically and internationally). However, the deterrent value of harsher penalties has been questioned when many assaults are under-reported. Aim: To identify the barriers and enablers to the reporting and prosecution of assaults experienced by nurses.Methods: In this study participants were recruited using a snowballing technique through health workforce emails, social media channels, and professional organisations. The investigator-developed survey prompted for categorical and open-ended responses. Descriptive and qualitative content analyses were used to ana-lyse the study data.Findings: Of the N = 275 respondents, n = 237 nurses had been assaulted at work. Assaulted nurses were typically female, over 31 years old, had more than five years of nursing experience, and worked in an emergency department. Overwhelmingly, nurses indicated receiving poor support when they wanted to report an assault to the police. Dominant themes (N = 6) identified systemic barriers that hinder criminal reporting, which was found to be a consequence of organisational and policing lapses, and self-limiting nursing culture. Discussion: This study identified several barriers for nurses to report and prosecute assaultive patients in Australia. The barriers point to a strong imperative for organisations that employ nurses and police to fulfil their responsibilities to enable and support assaulted nurses to prosecute.Conclusion: The study findings led to important recommendations for organisations and police to support, encourage, and empower nurses to prosecute assaultive patients, and ultimately deter violence.(c) 2023 Australian College of Nursing Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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