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Bullying and incivility in the most caring profession nursing
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Journal of Nursing & Care

ISSN: 2167-1168

Open Access

Bullying and incivility in the most caring profession nursing


4th International Conference on Nursing & Healthcare

October 05-07, 2015 San Francisco, USA

Jayne Skehan1,2

1Saint Peters University, USA 2New York Presbyterian Hospital, USA

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Nurs Care

Abstract :

Workplace bullying has become increasingly prevalent in healthcare and there is significant data to support bullying befalls and carries destruction. The zone of silence that surrounds and insulates this surreptitious behavior is real. In an environment in which bullying is not addressed, it often spreads. Many ramifications of workplace bullying affect employees as well as patients and can lead to decreased reimbursement, unsafe conditions and increases in errors in addition to an overall negative reputation for an organization. Recently, studies have suggested there is a direct correlation between professional nursing educational programs and decreased incivility in the workplace. Research studies support that when bullies in the workplace are held accountable, staff are more empowered to come forward and report these events. Through education, prevention and awareness, nursing educational programs can be instrumental in eradicating this behavior both in the academic world and hospital based settings. Undergraduate nursing students in the academic arena could benefit from evidence-based education on ramifications of buying and how to address it in their practice. Hospital based nursing education programs outlining policies and acceptable behaviors are another forum that could help to prevent workplace violence. Researchers agree additional studies are needed in order to examine the effectiveness of nursing educational programs on eliminating covert bullying.

Biography :

Jayne Skehan is the Director of Pediatric Cardiology Services at New York Presbyterian Hospital in New York City as well as a Per Diem Nursing Administrator at Mount Sinai Hospital in NYC. She has published in peer review nursing journals and she is pursuing her Doctoral degree in Nursing Practice (DNP) at Saint Peter’s University, USA.

Email: jas9110@nyp.org

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 4230

Journal of Nursing & Care received 4230 citations as per Google Scholar report

Journal of Nursing & Care peer review process verified at publons

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