Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention

Patient-perpetrated workplace violence (WPV) in healthcare is common. Although communication skills trainings are helpful, they may be strengthened by having a theoretical framework to improve replicability across contexts. This study developed and conducted an initial test of a training framed by C...

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Autores principales: Pines Rachyl, Giles Howard, Watson Bernadette
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Sciendo 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/fe85216d263d4e2e82648e772b59ca91
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:fe85216d263d4e2e82648e772b59ca912021-12-05T14:11:09ZManaging patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention2083-850610.2478/plc-2021-0004https://doaj.org/article/fe85216d263d4e2e82648e772b59ca912021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.2478/plc-2021-0004https://doaj.org/toc/2083-8506Patient-perpetrated workplace violence (WPV) in healthcare is common. Although communication skills trainings are helpful, they may be strengthened by having a theoretical framework to improve replicability across contexts. This study developed and conducted an initial test of a training framed by Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT) using longitudinal mixed-methods surveys of healthcare professionals in an American primary care clinic to increase their self-efficacy, patient cooperation, and use of CAT strategies to de-escalate patient aggression. Results of the intervention indicate that the CAT training significantly increased professionals’ efficacy and reported patient cooperation over time. Findings showed that those who reported using more of the five CAT strategies also reported situations that they were able to de-escalate effectively. This initial test of a CAT training to prevent WPV demonstrates promise for the applicability of CAT strategies to de-escalate patient aggression, and the need to scale and test these trainings in settings that experience high WPV levels.Pines RachylGiles HowardWatson BernadetteSciendoarticlecommunication accommodation theoryworkplace violencede-escalationhealthcareinterventionOral communication. SpeechP95-95.6PsychologyBF1-990ENPsychology of Language and Communication, Vol 25, Iss 1, Pp 62-81 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic communication accommodation theory
workplace violence
de-escalation
healthcare
intervention
Oral communication. Speech
P95-95.6
Psychology
BF1-990
spellingShingle communication accommodation theory
workplace violence
de-escalation
healthcare
intervention
Oral communication. Speech
P95-95.6
Psychology
BF1-990
Pines Rachyl
Giles Howard
Watson Bernadette
Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
description Patient-perpetrated workplace violence (WPV) in healthcare is common. Although communication skills trainings are helpful, they may be strengthened by having a theoretical framework to improve replicability across contexts. This study developed and conducted an initial test of a training framed by Communication Accommodation Theory (CAT) using longitudinal mixed-methods surveys of healthcare professionals in an American primary care clinic to increase their self-efficacy, patient cooperation, and use of CAT strategies to de-escalate patient aggression. Results of the intervention indicate that the CAT training significantly increased professionals’ efficacy and reported patient cooperation over time. Findings showed that those who reported using more of the five CAT strategies also reported situations that they were able to de-escalate effectively. This initial test of a CAT training to prevent WPV demonstrates promise for the applicability of CAT strategies to de-escalate patient aggression, and the need to scale and test these trainings in settings that experience high WPV levels.
format article
author Pines Rachyl
Giles Howard
Watson Bernadette
author_facet Pines Rachyl
Giles Howard
Watson Bernadette
author_sort Pines Rachyl
title Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
title_short Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
title_full Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
title_fullStr Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
title_full_unstemmed Managing patient aggression in healthcare: Initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
title_sort managing patient aggression in healthcare: initial testing of a communication accommodation theory intervention
publisher Sciendo
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/fe85216d263d4e2e82648e772b59ca91
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