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Journal Article

Citation

Chapman R, Martin C. Int. Emerg. Nurs. 2014; 22(3): 140-145.

Affiliation

Monash Health, 135 David Street, Dandenong, Vic. 3175, Australia; Australian Catholic University, 115 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy Vic 3065, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ienj.2014.03.002

PMID

24768529

Abstract

INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND: Attitude of staff towards patients who present to the emergency department following deliberate self-poisoning may be integral to the outcome of these events. There is little in-depth understanding of emergency staff perceptions about this vulnerable group.

AIM: Explore staff perceptions about caring for patients who present to the emergency department following deliberate self-poisoning.

DESIGN: Qualitative descriptive study.

METHODS: Two open-ended questions enabled 186 clinicians to describe their perceptions about caring for people who present to the emergency department following deliberate self-poisoning. Data were analysed using qualitative data analysis procedures.

RESULTS: Three themes emerged from the data representing staff perceptions about caring for patients who deliberately self-poisoned and included depends on the patient, treat everyone the same, and skilled and confident to manage these patients.

CONCLUSION: Staff reported mixed reactions to patients presenting with deliberate self-poisoning. These included feelings of empathy or frustration, and many lacked the skills and confidence to effectively manage these patients. RELEVANCE TO PRACTICE: Health networks are required to ensure that emergency staff have specialist support, knowledge, skills, and guidelines to provide effective care for this vulnerable population.


Language: en

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