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AIM: To investigate the degree of second victim syndrome among nursing students in clinical practice and determine the rehabilitation process. BACKGROUND: Empirical evidence suggests that health care providers who are considered second victims suffer from various difficulties. Nursing students in a clinical setting could be potential second victims, but few studies have quantitatively investigated the experiences and explored their response processes. METHODS: A mixed-methods design was used. A questionnaire was sent to nursing students via a link to an electronic survey, and a semi-structured interview was conducted to explore their response process as second victims. RESULTS: The quantitative results showed that nursing students in the clinical setting suffered second victim-related distress and that the most significant influences were psychological distress and professional efficacy. Four stages of rehabilitation experiences emerged from the qualitative data. CONCLUSION: Being a second victim for nursing students in a clinical setting is psychological suffering, and although they can be expected to recover, an impact on professional efficacy is inevitable. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: Nursing managers must be aware that nursing students in a clinical setting might experience difficult situations after patient safety incidents and that developing appropriate programmes to support at-risk students is important.
Huang et al. (Sun,) studied this question.