| Literature DB >> 32612455 |
Woldegebriel Gebregziabher Kahsay1,2, Reza Negarandeh3, Nahid Dehghan Nayeri4, Merzieh Hasanpour5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sexual harassment is complex and has occupational hazards in nursing. Nurses experienced it than other employees. Female nurses are with the highest rate in the profession. Our aim was to determine the prevalence of sexual harassment against female nurses, the types, perpetrators, and health consequences of the harassment.Entities:
Keywords: Female nurses; Health consequences; Perpetrators; Prevalence; Sexual harassment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32612455 PMCID: PMC7324991 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-020-00450-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Fig. 1PRISMA flowchart search results on sexual harassment against female nurses. Adapted from Liberati et al., 2009 [19]
Prevalence, types and forms of sexual harassment against female nurses
| Authors and Year | Country | Sample size | Prevalence | Types and forms of sexual harassment | Quality Score (0–9) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Othman et al. 2018, [ | Kenya | 120 | 27.50% | Sexual harassment | |
| Fatema 2017, [ | Bangladesh | 133 | 71.00% | Sexual harassment | 5 |
| Hussein et al.2015, [ | Egypt | 110 | 87.30% | Verbal forms: Verbal comments to 27.57%,, Talking sexual words to 3.03%, Saying sexual jokes to 3.3%, Sending telephone to 12.43% Non-verbal: Whistling to 11.2%, sex look to 38.17%, Waving to 5.13%, Forced identification to 15.17%, Stalking to 2.7%, Touching nurses’ body to 4.23%, Removal of clothes to 2.70% | 7 |
| Ali et al.2015, [ | Egypt | 430 | 70.20% | Staring in suggestive manner at 70.90% of female nurses, Talking by sexual words to 58.60%, Comments or jokes to 57.30%, Unnecessary touches to 49.30%, Making an intercourse offer to 30.5%,Threatened sex to 9.6%, Rape to 1.30% | 7 |
| Mushtaq et al. 2015, [ | Pakistan | 200 | 71.66% | Sexual harassment | 6 |
| Khan et al.2015, [ | Pakistan | 150 | 80% | Sexual harassment | 5 |
| Park et al. 2015, [ | South Korea. | 970 | 19.70% | Sexual harassment | 6 |
| Subedi et al.2013, [ | Nepal | 134 | 40.30% | People showing naked pictures to 2.24% Embracing without permission to 18% Blackmail for sex to 2.24%, Threatening for sex to 2.24% Facing rape like situation to 2.24% | 5 |
| Suhaila & Rampal 2012, [ | Malaysia | 455 | 51.20% | Verbal sexual harassment to 46.60%, Visual harassment to 24.80% Psychological harassment to 20.90%, Physical harassment to 20.70% Non –verbal harassment to16.70% | 6 |
| Shiao et al. 2010, [ | Taiwan | 842 | 28.10% | Sexual harassment, Physical Harassment,Verbal Harassment Assault 3.5% | 7 |
| Hibino et al. 2009, [ | Japan | 464 | 56% | Sexual jokes to 64.30% of the nurses, Physical contact to 59.70%, Gazing with sexual interest to 36.70%,Request for dating to 27.20%, Request to touch patients body to 14.80%, Hugging to14%, Stalking to 9.80%, Rape to 0.90% | 7 |
| Celik & Celik 2007, [ | Turkey | 622 | 37.10% | Uninvited sexual jokes, stories, questions, or words to 11.62% Allusive sexual behaviors with the eye, hand, or face to 6.98% Unwillingly asked out to 6.1%, Unwanted mail or telephone calls to 5.14%, Touched on the body to 4.22%, Perpetrators shown their body sexually to 3.98%, Any attempt to assault to 0.18% | 7 |
| Gunnarsdottir et al. 2006, [ | Iceland | 600 | 10% | Sexual harassment to 10% | 8 |
| Hibino et al. 2006, [ | Japan | 464 | 55.80% | Stalking or visiting the nurse at her home to 1.08% | 8 |
| Kisa et al. 2002, [ | Turkey | 215 | 73% | Suggestive looks to 20%, Sexual teasing and jokes to 19%, Suggestive physical gestures to 18%, Pressure for dates to 14%, Unwanted letters, telephone calls to 10%, Exposure of parts of the, body in a sexually suggestive way to 11%, Brushing, touching or grabbing to 19.53% | 5 |
| Matsuoka et al.2001, [ | Japan | 243 | 49.4% | Touching to 5.35%, gossip to 3.3%, brought up the topic of sexual relations to7.82% Asking sexual relations to 5.35%, touch body to 5.35, tried to touch nurses body in 24.28%, sexual jokes or words to 17.28% comment on body to 13.58%, gazing in an unpleasant manner to 6.17%, Send nude photo to 2.47%, send letter/phone call containing sexual issue to 3.29% | 6 |
| Shaikh 2000, [ | Pakistan | 89 | 43.67% | Verbal sexual harassment to 21.10% Physical sexual harassment to 16.90% | 5 |
| Kisa & Dziegielewski 1996, [ | Turkey | 229 | 75% | Sexual teasing and jokes to 72%, Suggestive physical gestures to 65%, Pressure for dates to 53%, Unwanted letters, telephone calls to36%, Exposure of parts of the body in a sexually suggestive way to 40%, Brushing, touching or grabbing and grossly inappropriate touching to 26.64% | 7 |
| Dan et al.1995, [ | United States | 52 | 80% | Suggestive stories or offensive jokes to 51.9%, Unwelcome seductive behavior to 46.1%, Unwanted sexual attention to 41.4% Deliberately touched and made uncomfortably to 41.67% Unwanted discussion of personal or sexual matters to 35.87% | 5 |
| Libbus & Bowman 1994, [ | United States | 78 | 71.80% | Sexual jokes to 13.46%, Sexual remarks to 19.23%, Touch (brushing, patting, hugging) to 14.74 19% | 5 |
Note: The study designs were descriptive cross sectional in all articles
Perpetrators and health consequences of sexual harassment on female nurses
| Author/Year | Perpetrators | Consequences of sexual harassment |
|---|---|---|
| Othman et al., 2018 [ | – | Headache on 57.5%, fatigue on 56.67%, difficult sleep on 54.17%, Nightmare on 48.33%, and loss of appetite on 35% of nurses Stomach pain, weight gain, weight loss, disturbances of the menstrual cycle, muscular spasm or convulsions, and gastric ulcer disease or hypertensive. |
| Fatema, 2017 [ | – | Feeling of sadness on 54%, loss of self-confidence on 25%, crying for no reason on 35% and Social isolation on 22%. Uncontrolled ferociousness on 19%, trouble in emotional relationships on 27%, and bitterness on 48%. |
| Hussein et al., 2015 [ | 43.30% patient /family 30% follow nurse 26.70% doctors | Anxiety (Mean 41.27 ± 6.12) z = 3.85, Depression (Mean 33.40 ± 4.44) z = 2.10, |
| Ali et al., 2015 [ | 42.70% patients 61.90% patients’ family 12.90% doctors 45.40% staff | Felt anger on 37.10% Felt shame on 30.40% Psychological in general on 94.7% Disappointment on 76.50% Depression on 67.90%, and fear on 35.80% |
| Mushtaq et al. 2015 | – | Depression, anxiety, stress |
| Khan et al.,2015 [ | 55.3% patients/visitors 25.3% physicians 4.7% colleague nurses 14.7% administration | Psychological in general on 50.7% Physical health in general on 8% |
| Park et al., 2015 [ | 55.5% patients 15.2% patient family 34.6% physicians 2.6% colleague nurses 1.6% nurse managers | – |
| Subedi et al., 2013 [ | 18.52% patients 25.93% patient relatives 37.03% physician 11.11% administrative staff | – |
| Suhaila & Rampal, 2012 [ | Patients Patients’ relatives Colleagues Medical Officers | Psychological effects in general on74.70%. Fear on 80.30%, depression on 26.6%, loss of appetite on 8.60%, nausea on 7.70%, and fatigue on 1.30%. |
| Shiao et al., 2010 [ | Psychiatry patients | Night shift had negative effects on the score of general health (Coef-6, SE = 2.7 p = 0.03) Working in a psychiatric hospital was positively associated with scores in mental health (Coef 2.7,SE = 0.6 Working in psychiatry hospital was vitality, was negatively associated with these scores (Coef 1.7,SE = 0.7 |
| Hibino et al., 2009 [ | Patients | – |
| Celik & Celik 2007 [ | 43.30% patients 34.20% attendants 77.10% physicians 51.10% nurses 29.4% other personnel | Disturbed mental health on 44.6% Physical problem in general on 24.20% Sleeping difficulty on 24.20%, headache on 40.30%, stomach ache on 17.30%, negative social and family relations on 36.80%, disturbed family life on 27.30%, being tired on 14.30%, fear on 23.4%, helplessness on 17.30%, depression on 10.80%, belittlement or humiliation on 10.8%. |
| Gunnarsdottir et al., 2006 [ | – | Psychological wellbeing affected |
| Hibino et al., 2006 [ | 94% male patients | – |
| Kisa et al., 2002 [ | 39% patients 17% relatives of patient 41% physicians 4% other hospital staffs | Emotional reactions -Anger on 42.9%, fear on 11.4%, helpless on 8.2%, depression on 6.9%, feelings of humiliation on 10.5%, guilt/self-blame on 6.2%. Physical symptoms: Headaches on 37.7%, Dizziness on 2%, gastritis on 12.9%, nausea and/or vomiting on 2.4%, exhaustion on 12.9%, menstrual disturbances on 2%, inability to sleep on 20.2% and sleep more on 3.2%. |
| Matsuoka et al., 2001 [ | – | Mental problem on 41%. |
| Shaikh, 2000 [ | 2.80% male patients 11.27% male attendants 26.90% male physicians | – |
| Kisa & Dziegielewski,1996 | 34% patients 14% relatives of patients 44% physicians 9% other perpetrators | Emotional effects -Anger on 44%, feelings of humiliation on 14%, fear on 12%, guilt on 9%, and depression on 5% and helplessness on 5%. physical symptoms: Headaches on 38%, inability to sleep on 20%, feelings of exhaustion on 15%,gastritis on 14%, nausea and/or vomiting on 4%, tendency to sleep more than usual on 1%, dizziness on 1%, and menstrual disturbances on 1%. |
| Dan et al.,1995 [ | 75% patients 73% visitors 88.5% physicians 83% coworkers | Emotional condition on 47.4%. Physical condition on 11.1%. |
| Libbus & Bowman,1994 [ | 53.5% patients 5.4% patients’ family 25% physicians 12.5% non-nurse staff 3.6% nurses | Emotional responses on 70.5% (Anger on 23.6%), embarrassment on 19.6%, disgust on 19.6%, nervousness on 18.20%. |