Abstract
Background: There is growing global interest into the attitudes and clinical management of persons who have attempted suicide.
Aims: The principal purpose was to determine senior nursing staff attitudes towards patients who had attempted suicide from a professional and cultural perspective, which might influence care following hospital admission. The focus concerned nursing staff interactions at a psychological level that compete with physical tasks on general hospital wards.
Methods: A qualitative methodology was employed with audio-taped interviews utilising four level data coding. This article reports on a group of 15 nursing staff from a large general hospital in Mysore, Southern India.
Results: Findings suggested that patient care and treatment is directly influenced by the nurse’s religious beliefs within a general hospital setting with physical duties prioritised over psychological support, which was underdeveloped throughout the participant group.
Conclusion: The results allow a series of recommendations for educational and skills initiatives before progressing to patient assessment and treatment projects and cross-cultural comparison studies. In addition, interventions must focus on current resources and context to move the evidence-based suicide prevention forward.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the 15 nurses who volunteered their time and honesty to this study with the aim of raising care standards.
Declaration of interest
The first visit in 2012 to Mysore was funded by a start-up grant from the Tropical Health Education Trust (THET) that facilitated this follow up research visit. The authors declare no conflicts of interest.