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Nurses' rationale for underreporting of patient and visitor perpetrated workplace violence: a systematic review

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BMC NURSING
卷 22, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12912-023-01226-8

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Underreporting; Reporting; Workplace Violence; Nursing; Patient Perpetrated; Visitor Perpetrated; Aggression

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This systematic review investigates the reasons and rationale behind nurses' underreporting of workplace violence in healthcare. The study identifies nursing, management, and organizational factors as the main contributors to underreporting. Clear and concise reporting processes, along with educational support, are recommended to encourage staff reporting and address workplace violence.
BackgroundPatient and visitor perpetrated workplace violence (WPV) is a problem within healthcare and is known to be underreported by nurses and other healthcare workers. However, there are multiple and diverse reasons identified in the literature as to why nurses do not report. This systematic review aimed to investigate nurses' reasons and rationale related to underreporting of violence that occurs in the workplace.MethodsFollowing PRISMA guidelines for systematic review reporting, studies conducted between 2011 and early 2022 were identified from MEDLINE, CINAHL, APA PsychInfo, and Psychological and Behavioral Sciences Collection via EBSCOHost. Quantitative studies related to patient and visitor perpetrated violence containing explanations, reasons, or rationale related to underreporting were included.ResultsAfter quality appraisals, 19 studies representing 16 countries were included. The resulting categories identified nursing, management, and organizational factors. The most prominent nursing factors included nurses' fear of consequences after reporting, nurses' perceptions, and their lack of knowledge about the reporting process. Common management factors which contributed to nursing underreporting included lack of visible changes after reporting, non-supportive culture in which to report, and the lack of penalties for perpetrators. Organizational factors included the lack of policies/procedures/training for WPV, as well as a lack of an efficient and user-friendly reporting system. Supportive interventions from management, organizations, and community sources were summarized to provide insight to improve nurse reporting of WPV events.ConclusionUnderreporting of WPV is a complex and multi-faceted problem. An investigation into the rationale for underreporting a workplace violent event illustrates nurses, management, and organizations contribute to the problem. Clear and actionable interventions such as educational support for staff and the development of a clear and concise reporting processes are recommended to encourage staff reporting and to help address WPV in healthcare.

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