Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units

Introduction: Physical restraint may seem to be a useful and simple procedure to help the treatment but is a complex practice including physical, psychological, judicial, ethical and moral issues. Research was made on description basis in order to determine the knowledge, attitude and application le...

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Main Authors: Hatice Balcı, Selda Arslan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tabriz University of Medical Sciences 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Caring Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jcs.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/jcs-7-75.pdf
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spelling doaj-d9b7ecaf796a4ea2948062f8bcc227e92020-11-24T22:23:03ZengTabriz University of Medical SciencesJournal of Caring Sciences2251-99202018-06-0172758110.15171/jcs.2018.012JCS_19741_20170912181255Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care UnitsHatice Balcı0Selda Arslan1Department of Medical Services and Techniques, Vocational High School of Health Services, KTO Karatay University, Konya, TurkeyDepartment of Nursing, Healthy Science Faculty, Selcuk University, Konya, TurkeyIntroduction: Physical restraint may seem to be a useful and simple procedure to help the treatment but is a complex practice including physical, psychological, judicial, ethical and moral issues. Research was made on description basis in order to determine the knowledge, attitude and application levels of nurses working in critical care units about physical restraint applied on patients. Methods: The study was performed as a descriptive and correlation study. Working in ICUs, 158 nurses constituted the sampling. "Levels of Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices of Staff Regarding Physical Restraints Questionnaire" was used to collect data. Results: For information, attitude and practice scores, participants’ scores were 7.1(1.7), 31.8 (4.6) and 36.6 (3.2), respectively. No association was found between information subscale, and age, professional years, working time in ICUs and weekly working hours. However, for attitude subscale, a negative and weak association was found between age (r=-0.229) and professional years (r=-0.174), and increasing these variables decreased attitude score. No association was found between attitude score, and working time in ICUs and weekly working hours. While there was no association between practice score, and age, professional years and working time in ICUs, the increase in weekly working hours (r=-0.243) was found to decrease practice score, and this association was found weak. Conclusion: In conclusion, we consider nurses’ level of information is sufficient, but attitudes and practice were not at a positive level. It is recommendable that out of such conditions, novel approaches should be developed to decrease the use of physical restraint.http://jcs.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/jcs-7-75.pdfPhysical restraintNursesCritical Care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hatice Balcı
Selda Arslan
spellingShingle Hatice Balcı
Selda Arslan
Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
Journal of Caring Sciences
Physical restraint
Nurses
Critical Care
author_facet Hatice Balcı
Selda Arslan
author_sort Hatice Balcı
title Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
title_short Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
title_full Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
title_fullStr Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
title_full_unstemmed Nurses' Information, Attıtude and Practices towards Use of Physical Restraint in Intensive Care Units
title_sort nurses' information, attıtude and practices towards use of physical restraint in intensive care units
publisher Tabriz University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Caring Sciences
issn 2251-9920
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Introduction: Physical restraint may seem to be a useful and simple procedure to help the treatment but is a complex practice including physical, psychological, judicial, ethical and moral issues. Research was made on description basis in order to determine the knowledge, attitude and application levels of nurses working in critical care units about physical restraint applied on patients. Methods: The study was performed as a descriptive and correlation study. Working in ICUs, 158 nurses constituted the sampling. "Levels of Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices of Staff Regarding Physical Restraints Questionnaire" was used to collect data. Results: For information, attitude and practice scores, participants’ scores were 7.1(1.7), 31.8 (4.6) and 36.6 (3.2), respectively. No association was found between information subscale, and age, professional years, working time in ICUs and weekly working hours. However, for attitude subscale, a negative and weak association was found between age (r=-0.229) and professional years (r=-0.174), and increasing these variables decreased attitude score. No association was found between attitude score, and working time in ICUs and weekly working hours. While there was no association between practice score, and age, professional years and working time in ICUs, the increase in weekly working hours (r=-0.243) was found to decrease practice score, and this association was found weak. Conclusion: In conclusion, we consider nurses’ level of information is sufficient, but attitudes and practice were not at a positive level. It is recommendable that out of such conditions, novel approaches should be developed to decrease the use of physical restraint.
topic Physical restraint
Nurses
Critical Care
url http://jcs.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/jcs-7-75.pdf
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