Background
The review
Aims
Methods
Outcomes of interest
Search strategy
Inclusion criteria
Author(s) country | Setting or context | Aim(s) of the study | Design and sample |
---|---|---|---|
Curtis, Bowen et al. [19] Australia | Students enrolled in one university nursing program | Student nurses experience of horizontal violence | Non-randomised cross sectional sample with open ended responses |
152 Student nurses | |||
Corney [20] Australia | Registered nurses | Nurses experience of aggression | Qualitative research Heideggerian methodology. |
Sample 2 nurses | |||
Chairella and McInnes [43] Australia | Nursing case law | Explore legal and ethical frameworks that inform nursing practice | Review of case law 1904–2002 pertaining to nursing |
180 cases reviewed | |||
Farrell [21] Australia | Registered nurses | Nurses experience of aggression in the clinical setting | Sequential mixed method |
Non-randomised cross sectional survey. Sample 270 | |||
Qualitative component -Grounded theory. Sample 29 nurses (n = 7 university lecturers, 20 clinical staff & 7 university lecturers) | |||
Fasolino and Snyder, [22] United States | Nurses in 1 hospital | Relationships between nurse practice environment and medication errors | Non-randomised cross sectional survey |
Sample 248 RNs | |||
Gunnarsdo’ttir et al., [23] Iceland | Nurses in one hospital | Aspects of nurses’ work environment linked with job outcomes and assessments of quality of care | Non-randomised cross sectional survey |
Sample 695 nurses | |||
Hanrahan et al., [24] United States | Psychiatric registered nurses 67 general hospitals | Relationship between nurse practice environment and adverse events | Non-randomised cross sectional survey linked to secondary hospital data |
Sample 353 | |||
Tervo - Heikkinen et al., [25] | Registered nurses 34 inpatient wards | Relationship between nurse’s work environment and nursing outcomes | Non-randomised cross sectional survey |
Sample 664 | |||
Higgins and MacIntosh [26] Canada | OR nurses | Nurses perceptions of physician perpetrated abuse | Qualitative research |
Purposive sample from cohort of randomly selected nurses n = 10 | |||
Hutchinson, Vickers et al. [7] Australia | Registered and Enrolled nurses | Nature and extent of bullying in the Australian nursing workplace | Qualitative research |
Convenience sample n = 26 nurses | |||
Institute for Safe Medication Practices [27] United States | Health care providers | Not specified | Non-randomised cross-sectional Sample N = 2,095 |
(1,565 nurses, 354 pharmacists, 176 others) | |||
Jackson, Peters et al. [28] Australia | Registered and Enrolled nurses | Experiences of nurse whistleblowers | Qualitative research Narrative Inquiry |
Non-randomised convenience sample n = 18 | |||
Lyndon, [29] United States | Registered nurses (RNs), physicians (MDs), and CNMs 2 hospitals | Interpersonal, structural, and social processes affecting individual and collective among nurses and physicians | Qualitative research Grounded theory research |
Purposive sample | |||
19 providers (12 RNs, 2 CNMs, and 5 MDs.) Observation of 10 of the 19 participants (7 RNs, 2 MDs, and 1 CNM). | |||
Mallidou et al., [30] Canada | Nurses in 12 hospitals | Relationships and mechanisms between nursing specialty subcultures and selected patient outcomes | Non-randomised cross sectional and secondary data analysis |
Sample 1937 nurses | |||
McKenna, Smith et al. [31] New Zealand | Nurses registered to practice in the previous year | Horizontal violence experiences of newly registered nurses | Non-randomised cross sectional survey with open ended responses |
Sample 584 Registered Nurses | |||
MacKusick and Minick [32] United States | Registered nurses | Identify the factors influencing the decision of RNs to leave clinical nursing practice | Phenomenological design |
Purposive sample n = 10 | |||
McCusker et al., [33] Canada | Nurses in 13 units in one hospital | Confirm sub-scales from (NWI-R) assess the nursing work environment | Non-randomised cross sectional |
Sample 283 | |||
Randle [34] United Kingdom | Student nurses in one program | Influence of pre-registration experiences on self-esteem | Qualitative research - Grounded theory |
56 students at commencement, 39 at conclusion | |||
Rice Simpson and Lyndon, [35] United States | Midwives obstetric nurses one metropolitan area | Describe how nurses would respond in common clinical situations | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey with open ended response |
Sample 704 | |||
Roche 2010 [44] Australia | 94 nursing wards in 21 hospitals between 2004 and 2006 | Relationships between nurses’ self-rated perceptions of violence, and the nursing working environment and patient outcomes | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey and secondary analysis of data |
Sample 3,099 | |||
Rosenstein, [15] United States | Health workers 142 acute hospitals | Relationships between nurse-physician relationships and nurse satisfaction and retention | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey |
Sample 2562 | |||
Nurses = 1615 | |||
Physicians = 389 | |||
Executives = 104 | |||
Rosenstein and O’Daniel [8] United States | Large multi facility health care network | Investigate prevalence and impact of disruptive behaviour on clinical outcomes | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey with open ended responses |
Sample 1509 (1091 RN, 402 physicians, 16 administrators survey first distributed in 2003 and ongoing | |||
Rosenstein and O’Daniel [36] United States | Clinical staff in Four VHA regions | Significance of disruptive behaviour on communication and collaboration and impact on patient care | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey with open ended responses |
Sample 4,500 participants completed survey (2,846 nurses, 944 physicians, 40 executives, 700 not specified) | |||
Rosenstein and O’Daniel [36] United States | Staff in large metropolitan academic medical centre | Disruptive behaviours in peri operative services | Non-randomised cross-sectional survey with open ended responses |
Sample 244 professional staff (82 MDs, 71 RNs, 24 nurse anesthetists, 18 surgical technologists, and 49 others) | |||
Sofield and Salmond [37] United States | Nurse in three-hospital health system | Nurses experiences of verbal abuse and association with intent to leave | Randomised cross sectional survey |
Sample 465 | |||
Simons and Mawn [38] United States | Newly registered nurses in one state | Investigation of bullying among newly registered nurses | Non-randomised cross sectional survey with open ended response |
Sample 511 | |||
Strauss [39] United States | CRNAs in one state | Investigated nurses exposure to 20 types of bullying behaviour by physicians | Randomized cross-sectional survey with open ended responses |
Sample size not specified | |||
Smith [40] United States | Peri-operative nurses | Relationship between bullying and patient outcomes in terms of five surgical never events | Non-randomised cross sectional survey |
Sample 853 | |||
Walrath, Dang et al. [41] United States | Registered nurses 1 hospital | Nurses experiences of disruptive clinician behaviour | Qualitative study |
Purposive sample of 96 RNs | |||
Weisbrod [42] United States | Students nurses one university program | Perceptions of violence in the clinical setting | Mixed method |
Non-randomised cross sectional survey with open ended responses & focus groups. Sample 37 |
Search outcome
Quality review
Criteria | No of studies | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Yes | No | Unclear | N/A | |
Quantitative studies
| ||||
Design and sample
| ||||
Random or probability sample | 1 | 17 | ||
Sample adequate size and representative | 17 | 1 | ||
Inclusion criteria clearly defined | 4 | 12 | 2 | |
Measurement
| ||||
Valid and reliable measures | 4 | 12 | 2 | |
Confounding factors identified and managed | 4 | 14 | ||
Statistical analysis
| ||||
Appropriate statistics | 18 | |||
Qualitative studies
| ||||
Study design
| ||||
Congruity between philosophical perspective & methodology | 6 | 4 | ||
Congruity between research methodology and research question | 6 | 4 | ||
Congruity between the research methodology & data collection methods | 7 | 2 | 1 | |
Participants and their voices are adequately represented | 5 | 5 | ||
Influence of the researcher is addressed | 5 | 5 | ||
Statement locating the researcher culturally or theoretically | 4 | 6 | ||
Analysis
| ||||
Congruity between the research methodology & interpretation of results | 5 | 2 | 2 | |
Congruity between research methodology & presentation/ analysis | 6 | 1 | 3 | |
Presentation of findings
| ||||
Accords with current ethical criteria , evidence of ethical approval | 7 | 3 | ||
Conclusions drawn flow from the data | 6 | 2 | 2 | |
Mixed Methods
| ||||
Study design
| ||||
Random or probability sample | 2 | |||
Sample adequate size and representative | 1 | 1 | ||
Confounding factors identified and managed | 2 | |||
Mixed methods design is relevant to address the research question | 2 | |||
Measurement
| ||||
Valid and reliable measures | 2 | |||
Analysis
| ||||
Influence of the researcher is addressed | 2 | |||
Conclusions drawn flow from the data | 1 | 1 | ||
Appropriate consideration given to the limitations of the method | 1 | 1 |