Respect in forensic psychiatric nurse-patient relationships: a practical compromise.

J Forensic Nurs

Daphne Cockwell School of Nursing, Faculty of Community Services, Ryerson University Toronto, ON, Canada.

Published: March 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Forensic psychiatric nursing differs from other psychiatric settings due to its secure environment and court-imposed restrictions on patients.
  • Nurses in this field often face moral challenges in respecting patients who have committed serious crimes, leading to concerns about dehumanization and depersonalization.
  • This study analyzes how forensic psychiatric nurses understand and express respect for their patients, revealing four key influences: emotional responses, nonjudgmental attitudes, social identity/power dynamics, and the context of care.

Article Abstract

The context of forensic psychiatric nursing is distinct from other psychiatric settings as, it involves placement of patients in secure environments with restrictions determined by the courts. Previous literature has identified that nurses morally struggle with respecting patients who have committed heinous offences, which can lead to the patient being depersonalized and dehumanized. Although respect is fundamental to ethical nursing practice, it has not been adequately explored conceptually or empirically. As a result, little knowledge exists that identifies how nurses develop, maintain, and express respect for patients. The purpose of this study is to analyze the concept of respect systematically, from a forensic psychiatric nurse's perspective using the qualitative methodology of focused ethnography. Forensic psychiatric nurses were recruited from two medium secure forensic rehabilitation units. In the first interview, 13 registered nurses (RNs) and two registered practical nurses (RPNs) participated, and although all informants were invited to the second interview, six RNs were lost to follow-up. Despite this loss, saturation was achieved and the data were interpreted through a feminist philosophical lens. Respect was influenced by factors categorized into four themes: (1) emotive-cognitive reactions, (2) nonjudgmental approach, (3) social identity and power, and (4) context. The data from the themes indicate that forensic psychiatric nurses strike a practical compromise, in their understanding and enactment of respect in therapeutic relationships with forensic psychiatric patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-3938.2010.01090.xDOI Listing

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