Systematic review of studies of mental health nurses ’ experience of anger and of its relationships with their attitudes and practice

Accessible summary What is known on the subject? It is generally felt that it is helpful for mental health nurses to control their emotions during their work. There are different approaches, but there is growing acceptance that different emotions may need different coping strategies. There is lots of evidence that nurses sometimes feel anger in a number of situations, but the research about anger in mental health nurses has never been examined as a whole. What this paper adds to existing knowledge? We have systematically identified all previous research where nurses completed measures that tried to measure their anger in certain situations, compared it to other people or investigated how it affected them or what its relationship was with their practice. Only a few studies have measured nurses’ anger. However, it seems that while nurses are not generally angrier than any other group, they do often feel anger in relation to management of patient aggression and their job situation more generally. What are the implications for practice? Anger is the most commonly reported problematic emotion for mental health nurses. It may influence their practice and affect their well‐being. This has implications for staff support and training. AbstractIntroductionEmotional regulation is important in mental health nursing practice, but individual emotions may require different regulation strategies. There is ample evidence that nurses experience anger specifically during their work,...
Source: Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing - Category: Nursing Authors: Tags: REVIEW ARTICLE Source Type: research