Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study

ObjectivesViolence towards emergency department healthcare workers is pervasive and directly linked to provider wellness, productivity and job satisfaction. This qualitative study aimed to identify the cognitive and behavioural processes impacted by workplace violence to further understand why workp...

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Main Authors: Anne K Chipman, Elizabeth D Rosenman, Nancy J Simcox, Ly Huynh, Rosemarie Fernandez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2019-08-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/8/e031781.full
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spelling doaj-958156e0fab34822b842cdc6251247f32021-03-22T09:03:01ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552019-08-019810.1136/bmjopen-2019-031781Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative studyAnne K ChipmanElizabeth D RosenmanNancy J SimcoxLy HuynhRosemarie FernandezObjectivesViolence towards emergency department healthcare workers is pervasive and directly linked to provider wellness, productivity and job satisfaction. This qualitative study aimed to identify the cognitive and behavioural processes impacted by workplace violence to further understand why workplace violence has a variable impact on individual healthcare workers.DesignQualitative interview study using a phenomenological approach to initial content analysis and secondary thematic analysis.SettingThree different emergency departments.ParticipantsWe recruited 23 emergency department healthcare workers who experienced a workplace violence event to participate in an interview conducted within 24 hours of the event. Participants included nurses (n=9; 39%), medical assistants (n=5; 22%), security guards (n=5; 22%), attending physicians (n=2; 9%), advanced practitioners (n=1; 4%) and social workers (n=1; 4%).ResultsFive themes emerged from the data. The first two supported existing reports that workplace violence in healthcare is pervasive and contributes to burn-out in healthcare. Three novel themes emerged from the data related to the objectives of this study: (1) variability in primary cognitive appraisals of workplace violence, (2) variability in secondary cognitive appraisals of workplace violence and (3) reported use of both avoidant and approach coping mechanisms.ConclusionHealthcare workers identified workplace violence as pervasive. Variability in reported cognitive appraisal and coping strategies may partially explain why workplace violence negatively impacts some healthcare workers more than others. These cognitive and behavioural processes could serve as targets for decreasing the negative effect of workplace violence, thereby improving healthcare worker well-being. Further research is needed to develop interventions that mitigate the negative impact of workplace violence.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/8/e031781.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne K Chipman
Elizabeth D Rosenman
Nancy J Simcox
Ly Huynh
Rosemarie Fernandez
spellingShingle Anne K Chipman
Elizabeth D Rosenman
Nancy J Simcox
Ly Huynh
Rosemarie Fernandez
Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
BMJ Open
author_facet Anne K Chipman
Elizabeth D Rosenman
Nancy J Simcox
Ly Huynh
Rosemarie Fernandez
author_sort Anne K Chipman
title Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
title_short Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
title_full Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
title_fullStr Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the USA: results from a qualitative study
title_sort identification of processes that mediate the impact of workplace violence on emergency department healthcare workers in the usa: results from a qualitative study
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open
issn 2044-6055
publishDate 2019-08-01
description ObjectivesViolence towards emergency department healthcare workers is pervasive and directly linked to provider wellness, productivity and job satisfaction. This qualitative study aimed to identify the cognitive and behavioural processes impacted by workplace violence to further understand why workplace violence has a variable impact on individual healthcare workers.DesignQualitative interview study using a phenomenological approach to initial content analysis and secondary thematic analysis.SettingThree different emergency departments.ParticipantsWe recruited 23 emergency department healthcare workers who experienced a workplace violence event to participate in an interview conducted within 24 hours of the event. Participants included nurses (n=9; 39%), medical assistants (n=5; 22%), security guards (n=5; 22%), attending physicians (n=2; 9%), advanced practitioners (n=1; 4%) and social workers (n=1; 4%).ResultsFive themes emerged from the data. The first two supported existing reports that workplace violence in healthcare is pervasive and contributes to burn-out in healthcare. Three novel themes emerged from the data related to the objectives of this study: (1) variability in primary cognitive appraisals of workplace violence, (2) variability in secondary cognitive appraisals of workplace violence and (3) reported use of both avoidant and approach coping mechanisms.ConclusionHealthcare workers identified workplace violence as pervasive. Variability in reported cognitive appraisal and coping strategies may partially explain why workplace violence negatively impacts some healthcare workers more than others. These cognitive and behavioural processes could serve as targets for decreasing the negative effect of workplace violence, thereby improving healthcare worker well-being. Further research is needed to develop interventions that mitigate the negative impact of workplace violence.
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/9/8/e031781.full
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