已发表论文

探索中国患者安全事件后作为第二受害者的护士的经验和支持:混合方法

 

Authors Tang W , Xie Y, Yan Q, Teng Y, Yu L, Wei L, Li J, Chen Y, Huang X, Yang S, Jia K

Received 25 November 2023

Accepted for publication 29 February 2024

Published 12 March 2024 Volume 2024:17 Pages 573—586

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S451766

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Haiyan Qu

Aim: To investigate the current status of experience and support of nurses as second victims and explore its related factors in nurses.
Design: A sequential, explanatory, mixed-method study was applied.
Methods: A total of 406 nurses from seven tertiary hospitals in China were chosen as participants between September to October 2023. The Chinese version of the Second Victim Experience and Support Questionnaire (SVEST), Somatic Complaints of Sub-health Status Questionnaire (SCSSQ) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) were applied to collect quantitative data. Eight nurses were selected for a qualitative study through in-depth interviews. Through interpretive phenomenological analysis, the interview data were analysed to explore the experience and support of nurses as second victims.
Results: Practice distress (15.74 ±  4.97) and psychological distress (15.48 ±  3.74) were the highest dimensions, indicating Chinese nurses experienced second victim-related practice and psychological distress. Nurses with different gender, age, education, marital status, income, working hours, professional titles, and unit types have different levels of second victim-related experience and support (p <  0.05). In addition, the score of SVEST was positively associated with SCSSQ (r =  0.444) and GAD-7 (r =  0.490) (p <  0.05). This qualitative study found that the experience and support of nurses as second victims included nurses’ perceptions and needs for patient safety events; psychological, physical and practice distress of nurses; and nurses and hospitals coping style after patient safety events.
Discussion: Our findings suggest that nurses who are second victims of patient safety events experience severe practice and psychological distress, indicating that nursing managers should pay attention to psychological and practice distress of nurses after patient safety events and provide effective preventive measures.

Keywords: Nurses, second victims, patient safety events, mixed method