Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation

This qualitative descriptive research study was undertaken to describe the experiences of emergency nurses with critical incidents and identify strategies used to manage these situations in the emergency department setting. Critical incidents are events, such as death or serious injury, that cause a...

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Main Author: Bechtel, Cynthia Francis
Format: Others
Published: eScholarship@UMMS 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsn_diss/13
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1012&context=gsn_diss
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spelling ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsn_diss-10122021-08-17T05:15:16Z Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation Bechtel, Cynthia Francis This qualitative descriptive research study was undertaken to describe the experiences of emergency nurses with critical incidents and identify strategies used to manage these situations in the emergency department setting. Critical incidents are events, such as death or serious injury, that cause a strong emotional reaction and may overwhelm a nurse‘s usual coping skills. Nineteen nurses who worked in one of two community-based emergency departments in Central Massachusetts were interviewed and asked to describe a critical incident they had experienced in their nursing career. Qualitative content analysis revealed two major themes: (1) critical incident experiences; and (2) aftermath; and five subthemes: (a) connections; (b) workplace culture; (c) responses; (d) lasting effects; and (e) strategies. Critical incidents were limited to events with children, patient deaths, and interactions with family; this differed from prior research in that no incidents were identified involving multiple casualties, violence, or mutilating injuries. Connections occurred when the patient was known to the nurse or reminded the nurse of self or family. Responses were the reactions of the participants to the critical incident and were physical, psychological, and spiritual in nature. The majority of study participants cried in response to a critical incident. Workplace culture, a subtheme not found in other studies, involved their perceptions of expected behavior in the emergency department and emphasized the influence of workplace culture on newer or inexperienced nurses. The theme of aftermath described the time period following critical incident. Lasting effects occurred in the form of vivid memories that were triggered by different stimuli. The subtheme, strategies, revealed that nurses desired, but lacked formal strategies to manage their reactions following a critical incident. Thus, they described the use of informal strategies such as talking to co-workers and family members. Implications of this study support the need for educational preparation and support of emergency nurses who deal with critical incidents in the workplace. Intervening during the critical incident experience and having follow-up strategies in place to prevent distress and enhance coping in the aftermath are important for well-being, practice, and patient care in the emergency setting. 2009-05-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsn_diss/13 https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1012&context=gsn_diss Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Graduate School of Nursing Dissertations eScholarship@UMMS Nurse’s Role Emergency Nursing Critical Care Psychological Stress Nursing
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nurse’s Role
Emergency Nursing
Critical Care
Psychological Stress
Nursing
spellingShingle Nurse’s Role
Emergency Nursing
Critical Care
Psychological Stress
Nursing
Bechtel, Cynthia Francis
Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
description This qualitative descriptive research study was undertaken to describe the experiences of emergency nurses with critical incidents and identify strategies used to manage these situations in the emergency department setting. Critical incidents are events, such as death or serious injury, that cause a strong emotional reaction and may overwhelm a nurse‘s usual coping skills. Nineteen nurses who worked in one of two community-based emergency departments in Central Massachusetts were interviewed and asked to describe a critical incident they had experienced in their nursing career. Qualitative content analysis revealed two major themes: (1) critical incident experiences; and (2) aftermath; and five subthemes: (a) connections; (b) workplace culture; (c) responses; (d) lasting effects; and (e) strategies. Critical incidents were limited to events with children, patient deaths, and interactions with family; this differed from prior research in that no incidents were identified involving multiple casualties, violence, or mutilating injuries. Connections occurred when the patient was known to the nurse or reminded the nurse of self or family. Responses were the reactions of the participants to the critical incident and were physical, psychological, and spiritual in nature. The majority of study participants cried in response to a critical incident. Workplace culture, a subtheme not found in other studies, involved their perceptions of expected behavior in the emergency department and emphasized the influence of workplace culture on newer or inexperienced nurses. The theme of aftermath described the time period following critical incident. Lasting effects occurred in the form of vivid memories that were triggered by different stimuli. The subtheme, strategies, revealed that nurses desired, but lacked formal strategies to manage their reactions following a critical incident. Thus, they described the use of informal strategies such as talking to co-workers and family members. Implications of this study support the need for educational preparation and support of emergency nurses who deal with critical incidents in the workplace. Intervening during the critical incident experience and having follow-up strategies in place to prevent distress and enhance coping in the aftermath are important for well-being, practice, and patient care in the emergency setting.
author Bechtel, Cynthia Francis
author_facet Bechtel, Cynthia Francis
author_sort Bechtel, Cynthia Francis
title Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
title_short Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
title_full Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
title_fullStr Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
title_full_unstemmed Emergency Nurses’ Experiences with Critical Incidents: A Dissertation
title_sort emergency nurses’ experiences with critical incidents: a dissertation
publisher eScholarship@UMMS
publishDate 2009
url https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsn_diss/13
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1012&context=gsn_diss
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