# Nurses’ Decisions to Press Charges Against Hypothetical Patients Who Exhibit Violent Behavior

**Authors:** Darcy Copeland, Susan Tipton, Debra Culter, Mary Potter

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nursrep16010035 · 2026-01-22

## TL;DR

This study explores why nurses decide to press or not press charges against patients who act violently, finding that factors like injury and implicit bias may influence their decisions.

## Contribution

The study introduces new insights into nurses' legal decision-making influenced by implicit bias and patient characteristics.

## Key findings

- Most nurses would not press charges against hypothetical violent patients.
- Injury and perceived intentionality increased likelihood of pressing charges.
- Implicit bias influenced decisions based on patient age, gender, and race.

## Abstract

Background: Patients are the most frequent perpetrators of physical violence against nurses. In the United States, most states have established laws designating assault against nurses a felony, or serious crime. It is unknown what reasons nurses have for pressing charges or not pressing charges against patients. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine nurses’ decisions regarding pressing charges when patients exhibit violent behavior. Methods: This study used a mixed-method, cross-sectional, descriptive design. Three unfolding case studies were presented in an electronic survey. Twelve versions of the survey were randomly assigned to participants. Each described an adolescent, adult, and geriatric patient. The narrative descriptions were identical, but the visual representations of the patients differed. Results: A total of 499 nurses from seven hospitals in the western United States responded. Most nurses indicated that they would not press charges against any of the hypothetical patients. An injury occurring and an assumption of intentionality contributed to nurses’ decisions to press charges. Participants were more likely to press charges against the adolescent and adult patients than the geriatric patient. The hypothetical adolescent and geriatric patients were more likely to have charges pressed against them if presented as female than if presented as male. The hypothetical adult patient was more likely to have charges pressed against them if presented as white than if presented as black. Conclusions: There is no consensus regarding when a nurse ought to pursue legal action against a patient who exhibits violent behavior. In addition to the presence of injury and the assumption of intentionality, it is possible that implicit bias may also play a role in these decisions. More investigation into this is needed.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Violent Behavior (MESH:D001523), injury (MESH:D014947)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12844617