Publication | Closed Access
Psychological Needs and Threat to Safety: Implications for Staff and Patients in a Psychiatric Hospital for Youth.
190
Citations
39
References
2005
Year
PsychopathologyAdolescent Behavioral HealthMental Health InterventionMental HealthTrauma In ChildChild Mental HealthWorker Well-beingPsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyYouth Mental HealthPhysical ThreatPsychological NeedsHealth SciencesTeen Mental HealthMental Health ServicesPsychiatryMotivationPhysical SafetyNursingPsychiatric HospitalWork-related StressSelf-determination TheoryChild PsychiatryYouth Behavioral Health
For psychiatric care workers and administrators, physical threat from behaviorally dysregulated patients is an important issue tied to many others, including workers' job satisfaction, motivation, well-being, and attitude toward patients.Yet, the impact of threats to physical safety may be offset by factors in the clinical environment.The authors tested hypotheses derived from self-determination theory concerning the relations of workplace need satisfaction and perceived threat to motivation, attitudes, and well-being among clinical staff within an adolescent psychiatric inpatient hospital.Also tested were relations between need satisfaction and treatment motivation among adolescent patients.To improve the experience of psychiatric workers and their patients, clinical staff and their administrators must attend to the satisfaction of needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence.
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