Eliciting critical care nurses' beliefs regarding physical restraint use

Nursing Ethics
Gemma Via-ClaveroPilar Delgado-Hito

Abstract

Despite the reported harms and ethical concerns about physical restraint use in the critical care settings, nurses' intention to apply them is unequal across countries. According to the theory of planned behaviour, eliciting nurses' beliefs regarding the use of physical restraints would provide additional social information about nurses' intention to perform this practice. To explore the salient behavioural, normative and control beliefs underlying the intention of critical care nurses to use physical restraints from the theory of planned behaviour. A belief elicitation study was conducted. Twenty-six critical care nurses were purposively sampled across gender, work-shift patterns and professional experience in five intensive care units of three hospitals in Spain. Data were obtained from a nine-item open-ended questionnaire and a focus group. Deductive content analysis was performed. Ethical approval was obtained from the hospital ethics committee. Participants were assured their participation was voluntary. Nurses framed the use of restraints as a way of prioritising patients' physical safety. They referred to contextual factors as the main reasons to justify their application. Nurses perceived that their decision is approved...Continue Reading

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Citations

Jul 20, 2019·Nursing Ethics·Zahra SalehiSoodabeh Joolaee
Jun 2, 2020·Critical Care Nurse·Öznur Gürlek KısacıkTuğba Coşğun
Oct 30, 2020·Nursing Ethics·Sanna KoskinenUNKNOWN ProCompNurse Consortium
Oct 1, 2019·World Neurosurgery·Amina Guenna HolmgrenAnn-Christin von Vogelsang
Sep 4, 2020·Nursing in Critical Care·Büşra Ertuğrul, Dilek Özden

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