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Nurses attitudes and beliefs to attempted suicide in Southern India
Jones, Steven ; Krishna, Murali ; Rajendra, Rajagopal ; Keenan, Paul
Jones, Steven
Krishna, Murali
Rajendra, Rajagopal
Keenan, Paul
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EPub Date
Publication Date
2015-05-20
Submitted Date
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Abstract
Background: There is growing global interest into the attitudes and clinical management of
persons who have attempted suicide.
Aims: The principal purpose was to determine senior nursing staff attitudes towards patients
who had attempted suicide from a professional and cultural perspective, which might influence
care following hospital admission. The focus concerned nursing staff interactions at a
psychological level that compete with physical tasks on general hospital wards.
Methods: A qualitative methodology was employed with audio-taped interviews utilising four
level data coding. This article reports on a group of 15 nursing staff from a large general
hospital in Mysore, Southern India.
Results: Findings suggested that patient care and treatment is directly influenced by the nurse’s
religious beliefs within a general hospital setting with physical duties prioritised over
psychological support, which was underdeveloped throughout the participant group.
Conclusion: The results allow a series of recommendations for educational and skills initiatives
before progressing to patient assessment and treatment projects and cross-cultural comparison
studies. In addition, interventions must focus on current resources and context to move the
evidence-based suicide prevention forward.
Citation
Jones, S., Krishna, M., Rajendra, R. & Keenan, P. (2015). Nurses attitudes and beliefs to attempted suicide in Southern India. Journal of Mental Health, 24(6), 423-429.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Journal of Mental Health
Research Unit
DOI
10.3109/09638237.2015.1019051
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Article
Language
en
Description
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Mental Health on 20-5-15, available online: https://doi.org/10.3109/09638237.2015.1019051
Series/Report no.
ISSN
0963-8237
EISSN
1360-0567
