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Journal Article

Citation

Cabilan CJ, Eley R, Snoswell C, Jones AT, Johnston ANB. Australas. Emerg. Care 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, College of Emergency Nursing Australasia, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.auec.2022.07.007

PMID

35906121

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The three-item occupational violence (OV) risk assessment tool was developed and validated for use in emergency departments (EDs). It prompts review of each patient's aggression history, behaviours, and clinical presentation. However, confidence around representativeness and generalisability are needed before widescale adoption; hence we measured the inter-rater reliability of the tool among a large group of emergency nurses.

METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted between Sep 2021 and Jan 2022. Nurses were directed to a website that hosted an e-learning module about the tool. They were asked to apply the tool to two video scenarios of typical patient presentations. Demographic data, including years of emergency experience, were collected to contextualise their responses. Gwet's Agreement Coefficients (AC1) were calculated to determine inter-rater reliability.

RESULTS: There were 135 participants: typically female, under the age of 40 years, with more than 3 years of emergency nursing experience. Overall, there was excellent inter-rater agreement (AC1 =0.752, p = 0.001). This was consistent when years of ED experience was stratified: 0-2 years, AC1 = 0.764, p = 0.002; 3-5 years, AC1 = 0.826, p = 0.001; 6-10 years, AC1 = 0.751, p < 0.001; 11-15 years, AC1 = 0.659, p = 0.004; ≥ 16 years, AC1 = 0.799, p < 0.001.

CONCLUSION: The three-item OV risk assessment tool has excellent inter-rater reliability across a large sample of emergency nurses.


Language: en

Keywords

Nurses; Risk assessment; Psychometrics; Emergency department; Workplace violence; Risk factors; Emergency nursing; E-learning; Instrument development; Nursing education

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