TY - JOUR TI - Greek mental health nurses' practices and attitudes in the management of acute cases AU - Koukia, E. AU - Mangoulia, P. AU - Stathopoulos, T. AU - Madianos, M. JO - Issues in Mental Health Nursing PY - 2013 VL - 34 TODO - 3 SP - 192-197 PB - SN - 0161-2840, 1096-4673 TODO - 10.3109/01612840.2012.733908 TODO - psychotropic agent, acute disease; adult; article; attitude to health; comparative study; cooperation; counseling; crisis intervention; cultural factor; doctor nurse relation; education; female; Greece; human; in service training; interdisciplinary communication; male; mental disease; mental hospital; nurse patient relationship; nursing; organization and management; psychiatric nursing; thinking, Acute Disease; Adult; Cooperative Behavior; Counseling; Crisis Intervention; Cross-Cultural Comparison; Female; Greece; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Hospitals, Psychiatric; Humans; Inservice Training; Interdisciplinary Communication; Male; Mental Disorders; Nurse-Patient Relations; Physician-Nurse Relations; Psychiatric Nursing; Psychotropic Drugs; Security Measures; Thinking TODO - The aim of this study was to identify nurses' interventions, views, and attitudes concerning critical incidents. Using semi-structured interviews, a descriptive study was conducted among mental health nurses working in three major psychiatric hospitals. Analysis of nurses' audio-recorded data indicated that they had used a number of different interventions under six main categories: counseling, performing security practices, monitoring thinking disturbances, contacting the psychiatrist on-call, contacting the chief nurse on-call, and administering medication. The need for specialized training was noticed and problems like accountability, nurse-patient interactions, and nurse-doctor relationships were considered crucial by the mental health nurses. © 2013 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc. ER -