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.com

Volume 6, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Nurs Care, an open access journal

ISSN: 2167-1168

World Nursing 2017

July 10-12, 2017

23

rd

World Nursing and Healthcare Conference

July 10-12, 2017 Berlin, Germany

Nurses in street attire: Facilitator of recovery process?

Lok Yan Chu, Daniel Bressington, Tin Wai Chang, Tsz Yuet Dai, Lok Hui, Hei Tung Ip, San Yuet Kwok, Kin Long Ying

and

Fung Man Chan

Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

T

he Recovery Model has been introduced in Hong Kong since 2010. Recently, the policy of uniform in rehabilitation ward has

changed to allow staff wear their own clothes to better fit the Recovery Model. The effects of nursing staff wearing street attire

have been under discussion over the past decades in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia. However, this literature

is of limited value to the psychiatric services in Hong Kong, where no related research has been conducted. The aim of the study was

to explore Hong Kong mental health nurses’ views about wearing street attire within an in-patient rehabilitation unit in regards to

facilitating patients’ recovery process. A qualitative descriptive study method, utilizing individual in-depth semi-structured research

interview, was employed in this study. Interview data were content analyzed from the perspective of post-positivism. A total of 11

interviews were conducted with nurse participants. The analysis process initially identified 177 open codes, which were merged into

81 nodes. Finally, 3 main themes and 9 sub-themes were identified. Main themes were ‘building up rapport with patients’, ‘street

attire helps deinstitutionalization’ and ‘different approaches to maximize the benefit and to minimize the risk’. A majority of nurse

participants positively viewed the policy of wearing street attire in a psychiatric rehabilitation unit, they felt the policy was potentially

beneficial to patients’ recovery process. Street attire is not the only key to recovery, nurses are recommended to be aware of their skills

in taking care of patients, to further maximize the benefit of the policy.

Biography

Lok Yan, Chu is currently a final-year undergraduate in BSc (Hons) in Mental Health Nursing in The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. She has been a student

research assistant under an assistant professor in Centre of Gerotological Nursing at school since June 2016. She was also the editor of two publications related

to pain management in people with Dementia. “Nurses in street attire: Facilitator of recovery process?” is the first research project that she was a co-investigator

working with her research teammates. She has been nominated to join a nursing exchange programme in National University of Singapore in the summer of 2016.

Lok Yan Chu et al., J Nurs Care 2017, 6:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2167-1168-C1-049