Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators

This phenomenological study explored female nursing students' perceptions of their experiences of workplace violence and aggression, their methods for coping with and adjusting to the violence, and the implications for nursing education. A notice soliciting volunteers was posted on student bull...

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Main Author: Beardsley, Bonnie Jean
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks 2003
Online Access:http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dilley/9
http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1009&context=dilley
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dilley-10092015-10-08T16:54:02Z Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators Beardsley, Bonnie Jean This phenomenological study explored female nursing students' perceptions of their experiences of workplace violence and aggression, their methods for coping with and adjusting to the violence, and the implications for nursing education. A notice soliciting volunteers was posted on student bulletin boards in multiple schools of nursing throughout Illinois. Ten participants were selected from a pool of volunteers who met predetermined criteria. Open-ended interviews each lasting approximately 60 minutes were conducted and tape-recorded. Four interview questions that guided the process changed as the narrative unfolded, and in some cases, probing became necessary to gain a rich description. Data analysis was completed using Colaizzi's Seven-Step Model. The results of this study suggested nursing students may experience some form of workplace violence during their nursing education. Once exposed the nursing student may become a silent victim, afraid to report the incident, fearing she will be expelled from nursing school. As a silent victim, the student lacks the ability to cope with the situation partly because of the limited nursing curriculum on workplace violence. This may lead to anger, fear, multiple stress responses, and a distorted perception of caring in the nursing profession. In the end, the nursing student may enter the workplace as a nurse perpetuating the cycle of silent victim of violence, or take on the challenge to break the cycle, opening the way for improving the nursing profession. 2003-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dilley/9 http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1009&context=dilley Frank Dilley Award for Outstanding Doctoral Study ScholarWorks
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sources NDLTD
description This phenomenological study explored female nursing students' perceptions of their experiences of workplace violence and aggression, their methods for coping with and adjusting to the violence, and the implications for nursing education. A notice soliciting volunteers was posted on student bulletin boards in multiple schools of nursing throughout Illinois. Ten participants were selected from a pool of volunteers who met predetermined criteria. Open-ended interviews each lasting approximately 60 minutes were conducted and tape-recorded. Four interview questions that guided the process changed as the narrative unfolded, and in some cases, probing became necessary to gain a rich description. Data analysis was completed using Colaizzi's Seven-Step Model. The results of this study suggested nursing students may experience some form of workplace violence during their nursing education. Once exposed the nursing student may become a silent victim, afraid to report the incident, fearing she will be expelled from nursing school. As a silent victim, the student lacks the ability to cope with the situation partly because of the limited nursing curriculum on workplace violence. This may lead to anger, fear, multiple stress responses, and a distorted perception of caring in the nursing profession. In the end, the nursing student may enter the workplace as a nurse perpetuating the cycle of silent victim of violence, or take on the challenge to break the cycle, opening the way for improving the nursing profession.
author Beardsley, Bonnie Jean
spellingShingle Beardsley, Bonnie Jean
Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
author_facet Beardsley, Bonnie Jean
author_sort Beardsley, Bonnie Jean
title Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
title_short Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
title_full Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
title_fullStr Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
title_full_unstemmed Nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: Making sense of the phenomenon for educators
title_sort nursing students' experiences of workplace violence and aggression: making sense of the phenomenon for educators
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2003
url http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dilley/9
http://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1009&context=dilley
work_keys_str_mv AT beardsleybonniejean nursingstudentsexperiencesofworkplaceviolenceandaggressionmakingsenseofthephenomenonforeducators
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