6 research outputs found
Therapeutic characteristics of nursing staff in a medium secure setting
This article discusses the therapeutic and security roles of forensic nursing staff, in medium secure units, viewed as they are by male patients with learning disabilities or mentally disordered patients (the âmenâ) as providing âa source of treatment, comfort, and adviceâ, but also as âpart of the system that deprives them of their libertyâ, respectively, which can cause problems for both nurses and patients. Following an introduction, topics such as âforensic practiceâ, âtherapeutic relationshipsâ, ;the therapy/security paradoxâ, âcustodial careâ, âpositive aspects of caringâ, âcharacteristics of the âgoodâ nurseâ and âdiscourseâ are discussed prior to describing the methods involved in this retrospective discourse analysis of a local study from the UK. The research involved interviews, group workshops, focus groups and written accounts with and from 10 nursing staff, 3 researchers and 7 âmenâ about their beliefs about forensic nursing characteristics/practices and âtruthsâ about staff-user relationships. These authors quote the participantsâ own words while discussing findings. They claim that âstaff take pleasure in the menâs achievementsâ and âmen and staff enjoy each othersâ companyâ and list implications for future practice