Keywords

clinical nurse specialist, physical restraint, qualitative, safety work

 

Authors

  1. LUDWICK, RUTH PhD, RN.C, CNS
  2. MEEHAN, ANITA MSN, CNS, ONC
  3. ZELLER, RICHARD PhD
  4. O'TOOLE, RICHARD PhD

Abstract

Purpose: This study examines the variations and complexities in nurses' decision making about the initiation, maintenance, and termination of physical restraints.

 

Methods: This qualitative research used a semistructured interview of registered nurses on medical-surgical units at a midsized hospital in the Midwest.

 

Results: All the nurse respondents easily recalled caring for a patient in restraints and detailed in their accounts a complex trajectory of care that centered on safety. However, most nurses reported that the trajectory of restraint use was started by other departments, shifts, or nurses. The findings revealed a forceful interplay of patient, nurse, family, healthcare worker, and organizational factors that influence nurses' decision making about restraint use.

 

Conclusions: This article discusses how a deeper understanding of the intricacies of the decision-making processes related to restraints can help clinical nurse specialists tailor education, impact policy, and serve as role models to reduce the use of restraints in hospitals.