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Psychological Stress Responses of Medical Staff After Workplace Violence: a Longitudinal Study

Overview
Journal Am J Transl Res
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2022 Sep 15
PMID 36105036
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Abstract

Objective: To explore the occurrence and dynamic trends of psychological stress responses of medical staff experiencing workplace violence at different time points.

Methods: A longitudinal study of 23 medical workers who experienced workplace violence was conducted. The perceived stress scale (PSS-4), posttraumatic stress disorder checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5), and hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS) were used to measure the medical workers' psychological perception of pressure, posttraumatic stress symptoms, anxiety, and depression at the time of exposure to violence, at 1 month, 2 months, and 4 months after exposure in the workplace, respectively. Repeated measures analysis of variance was applied to analyze psychological stress response and temporal effect. Factors influencing psychological stress responses were analyzed.

Results: The scores of PSS-4, PCL-5, HADS-anxiety, and HADS-depression of medical staff exposed to violence began to increase at the time of exposure, peaked 1 month after exposure, and gradually decreased 2 months and 4 months after exposure (all P<0.05). The main influencing factors were being nurses, physical violence, working years ≤5, and being female.

Conclusion: Effective interventions for medical staff should be made up to 1 month after exposure to workplace violence when the psychological stress responses are the highest.

Citing Articles

Relationship between workplace violence, job satisfaction, and burnout among healthcare workers in mobile cabin hospitals in China: Effects of perceived stress and work environment.

Hu Y, Zhang S, Zhai J, Wang D, Gan X, Wang F Prev Med Rep. 2024; 40:102667.

PMID: 38450207 PMC: 10915624. DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2024.102667.

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