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Journal Article

Citation

Ayasreh IR, Khalaf IA. Int. J. Nurs. Educ. Scholarsh. 2020; 17(1): e60.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Walter de Gruyter)

DOI

10.1515/ijnes-2020-0060

PMID

33027049

Abstract

Background Workplace violence is one of the most compelling problems facing health care sectors all over the world. The detrimental impact of workplace violence extends to affect nurse students who receive their training in clinical areas.

OBJECTIVE The study aimed to investigate the impact of witnessing workplace violence during clinical training on the attitudes of Jordanian nursing students toward the nursing profession.

METHODS Cross-sectional design was used in this study. Data were collected through electronic survey questionnaires from 131 nursing students from three nursing schools in Jordan. Attitude Scale for Nursing Profession was used to assess the participants' attitude toward nursing profession.

RESULTS The results showed that about 34% of student participants witnessed workplace violence during their clinical training. Nursing student participants who did not witness workplace violence showed significantly more positive attitude toward nursing profession than who did witness.

CONCLUSION Witnessing workplace violence had a significant negative impact on how nursing students view nursing job.


Language: en

Keywords

attitudes; workplace violence; nursing profession; nursing students

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