Litcius/Paper detail

Moving on after critical incidents in health care: A qualitative study of the perspectives and experiences of second victims

Melanie Buhlmann, Beverley Ewens, Amineh Rashidi

2022Journal of Advanced Nursing18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS: To gain a deeper understanding of nurses and midwives' experiences following involvement in a critical incident in a non-critical care area and to explore how they have 'moved-on' from the event. DESIGN: An interpretive descriptive design guided inductive inquiry to interpret the meaning of moving-on. METHODS: Purposive sampling recruited 10 nurses and midwives. Data collection comprised semi-structured interviews, memos and field notes. Data were concurrently collected and analysed during 2016-2017 with NVivo 11. The thematic analysis enabled a coherent analytical framework evolving emerging themes and transformation of the data into credible interpretive description findings, adhering to the COREQ reporting guidelines. RESULTS: The findings revealed five main themes: Initial emotional and physical response, the aftermath, long-lasting repercussions, workplace support and moving-on. CONCLUSION: This study shed light on the perceptions of nurses and midwives who lived through the impact of critical incidents. Through their lens, the strategies engaged in to move-on were identified and their call for organizational and collegial support received a voice.

Topics & Concepts

Nonprobability samplingThematic analysisCritical Incident TechniqueQualitative researchMeaning (existential)PsychologyNursingPerceptionData collectionHealth careApplied psychologyMedicineSociologyEconomicsEconomic growthNeuroscienceSocial scienceMarketingBusinessPopulationPsychotherapistEnvironmental healthDisaster Response and ManagementFamily and Patient Care in Intensive Care UnitsPatient Safety and Medication Errors