2014
DOI: 10.1111/jcap.12091
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Improving the Culture of Safety on a High‐Acuity Inpatient Child/Adolescent Psychiatric Unit by Mindfulness‐Based Stress Reduction Training of Staff

Abstract: A brief MBSR training program offered to an interprofessional staff of a high-acuity inpatient adolescent psychiatric unit was effective in decreasing their stress, increasing their mindfulness, and improving staff and patient safety.

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Cited by 34 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…However, significant decreases in PS scores were evident with perceived stress levels significantly reduced at post-test following the MBSR intervention for all three hospitals. This finding is consistent with other studies suggesting that MBSR is an effective stress management intervention among hospital based nurses (Penque, 2009;Mackenzie, 2006;Cohen Katz, 2005b;Pipe et al, 2009;Brady, 2014;Horner et al, 2014;), and supports previous research suggesting that an MBSR intervention is a practical and collegial way to provide health care workers with the self-care tools to manage stress (Fortney et al, 2013) and reduce nurses' burnout levels (Craigie et al, 2016). In addition, the elevated pre-test stress levels demonstrated in this study reflect the findings from other studies that also established high base-line perceived stress scores utilising the PSS (Shapiro et al, 2005;Duchemin et al, 2015;Moody et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…However, significant decreases in PS scores were evident with perceived stress levels significantly reduced at post-test following the MBSR intervention for all three hospitals. This finding is consistent with other studies suggesting that MBSR is an effective stress management intervention among hospital based nurses (Penque, 2009;Mackenzie, 2006;Cohen Katz, 2005b;Pipe et al, 2009;Brady, 2014;Horner et al, 2014;), and supports previous research suggesting that an MBSR intervention is a practical and collegial way to provide health care workers with the self-care tools to manage stress (Fortney et al, 2013) and reduce nurses' burnout levels (Craigie et al, 2016). In addition, the elevated pre-test stress levels demonstrated in this study reflect the findings from other studies that also established high base-line perceived stress scores utilising the PSS (Shapiro et al, 2005;Duchemin et al, 2015;Moody et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Indeed, inconsistency in the use of scales across studies was a common theme in this review. Toronto Mindfulness Scale (Brady et al, 2012) (Hallman et al, 2014) Two Factor Mindfulness Scale (Krasner et al, 2009) Note. Authors in bold denote RCT studies.…”
Section: Mindfulness and Awarenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Often these educational interventions employed TeamSTEPPS or CRM (crisis resource management) approaches [24][25][26][27]. Studies reporting the use of interprofessional practice interventions tended to employ team checklists [28][29], team briefings [30,31] or patient safety rounds [32,33]. Those studies that employed multiple intervention methods blended, for example, team-based training with practice-based activities such as the use of a team briefing [34][35].…”
Section: Insert Table 2 About Herementioning
confidence: 99%