“[It] Does Harden a Person Working in Such a Stressful Environment”
Elizabeth Keller, Samantha Boch, Kermit G. Davis, Gordon L. Gillespie, Beverly M. Hittle- Law
- Nursing (miscellaneous)
- Psychiatry and Mental health
- General Medicine
- Pshychiatric Mental Health
- Pathology and Forensic Medicine
- Issues, ethics and legal aspects
ABSTRACT
Background
The United States makes up 4.4% of the world's population but nearly a quarter of the world's incarcerated population. Despite caring for nearly 2 million incarcerated persons and managing their unique needs, little is known about how this work spills over and affects the nurses who work in correctional settings.
Study Objective
This descriptive study aimed to (a) examine write-in answers regarding correctional nurse perceptions of how their work impacts their health and their home lives and (b) explore correctional nurse responses for how to improve the work environment to better support their well-being.
Method
The researchers compiled and analyzed qualitative data from a cross-sectional study where U.S. correctional nurses (
Results
Approximately 41% (
Conclusions
Correctional organizations may consider ways to support the well-being of their nurses through adequate staffing, flexible scheduling, decreased mandatory overtime, and hiring effective nurse managers as key members of the correctional team.