Increasing coping and strengthening resilience in nurses providing mental health care: empirical qualitative research

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Date
2018Author
Ramalisa, Rudor J.
Du Plessis, Emmerentia
Koen, Magdalena P.
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Background: Research on coping and resilience is on the rise. However, there is a paucity of
information addressing strengths, assets, competence or resilience that enable nurses to remain
committed and cope in their profession despite the adversities they face in their working
environment.
Objective: The purpose of this research was to explore and describe how to strengthen the
resilience of nurses in a work environment with involuntary mental health care users.
Method: An exploratory and descriptive research design, which is contextual in nature, was
used.
Results: Narrative responses to two open-ended questions (How do you cope with providing
mental health care to involuntary admitted mental health care users? and; How can your
resilience be strengthened to provide mental health care to involuntary mental health care
users?) yielded coping mechanisms and resilience strengthening strategies.
Conclusion: Nurses caring for involuntary mental health care users are faced with challenging
situations while they themselves experience internal conflict and have limited choices available
to be assertive. To strengthen their resilience, the following factors should be taken into
account: support, trained staff, security measures and safety, teamwork and in-service training
and education
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- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]