Understanding aggression displayed by patients and families towards intensive care staff: A systematic review

Author:

Sridharan Varadaraj1ORCID,Leung Kelvin CY2ORCID,Peisah Carmelle23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, Central Coast Local Health District, NSW, Australia

2. Psychiatry Specialty, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

3. Discipline of Psychiatry and Mental Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Objectives: The objective of this systematic review was to synthesise literature pertaining to patient and family violence (PFV) directed at Intensive Care Unit (ICU) staff. Design: Study design was a systematic review. The data was not amenable to meta-analysis. Data Sources and Review Methods: Electronic searches of databases were conducted to identify studies between 1 January 2000 and 6 March 2023, limited to literature in English only. Published empirical peer-reviewed literature of any design (qualitative or quantitative) were included. Studies which only described workplace violence outside of ICU, systematic reviews, commentaries, editorials, letters, non-English literature and grey literature were excluded. All studies were appraised for quality and risk of bias using validated tools. Results: Eighteen studies were identified: 13 quantitative; 2 qualitative and 3 mixed methodology. Themes included: (i) what is abuse and what do I do about it? (ii) who is at risk? (iii) it is common, but how common? (iv) workplace factors; (v) impact on patient care; (vi) effect on staff; (vii)the importance of the institutional response; and (viii) current or suggested solutions. Conclusions: This systematic review demonstrated that PFV in the ICU is neither well-understood nor well-managed due to multiple factors including non-standardised definition of abuse, normalisation, inadequate organisational support and general lack of education of staff and public. This will guide in future research and policy decision making.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference61 articles.

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