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Difficult Patients

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... Patients 'Difficult' Patients. Complain. Unclean. Uncooperative. Extremely demanding ... Socially unacceptable illnesses (STD, addictive disorders) The ' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Difficult Patients


1
Difficult Patients
2
Difficult Patients
  • Complain
  • Unclean
  • Uncooperative
  • Extremely demanding
  • Want to be waited on
  • Socially unacceptable illnesses (STD, addictive
    disorders)

3
The Difficult Patient
  • Disruptive
  • Self-destructive
  • Sexually harassing
  • Aggressive or Violent

4
Factors that Lead to a Rise in Aggression
  • Frustration
  • Involuntary referral
  • Discontent with treatment
  • Pathology
  • Schizophrenia w/ personality disorder
  • Mania
  • Environment
  • Space
  • Crowding
  • Staff-patient ratios

5
Behavioral Phases of Violence
  • Baseline or relative calm
  • Pre-assault
  • Abusive remarks or physical agitation
  • Assault
  • Out of control physical and verbal behavior
    implement crisis intervention protocol

6
Warning Signs
  • Rapid, loud or profane speech
  • Change in level of consciousness (e.g.
    disorientation or confusion)
  • Clenched fists, gritting teeth, reddening face,
    widened eyes, flaring nostrils, rapid breathing
  • Motor agitation pacing

7
More Warning Signs
  • Visual or auditory hallucinations
  • Sudden change in or extremes of affect (e.g.
    exhilaration, grandiosity)
  • Sudden lack of affect in a previously very
    agitated or threatening person
  • Use of alcohol or drugs

8
Management of Violence in the Workplace
  • Prevention
  • Treating patients and their families with respect
  • Institutional security measures
  • De-escalation Techniques

9
Prevention
  • Dont use negative or derogatory labels.
  • Try to change climate that devalues patient.
  • Seek support and advice for dealing with
    difficult patients.
  • Be aware of your emotional responses to patients.
  • Affirm policies and practices that encourage
    respect.

10
Treating Patients with Respect
  • Are patients and relatives given sufficient
    information to avoid feeling helpless?
  • Could the environment be made more comfortable
    (e.g. waiting areas)?
  • Do patients know how and to whom to complain?

11
Institutional Security Measures
  • Make sure that areas are secure from people from
    the outside wandering around.
  • Monitor areas that are isolated at specific times
    of the day or night.
  • Keep walkways lit and free from hazards no
    blind corners.
  • Provide a way for staff to raise an alarm to call
    for help, e.g. panic buttons, intercoms, cell
    phones.
  • Train staff on what to do in a violent situation.

12
More Institutional Methods
  • Arrange furniture and equipment so that staff
    wont be trapped.
  • Make sure treatment rooms have two exits.

13
De-escalation Techniques
  • First Make sure you have an escape route.
  • Stay in an open, populated area
  • Dont let the patient get between you and the
    door.
  • Never turn your back on the patient.
  • Dont crowd the patients personal space or try
    to touch him.
  • Keep your own emotions under control and remember
    to breathe.

14
More De-escalation
  • Dont try to talk while the patient is shouting.
  • Do not
  • Challenge or become defensive or confrontational
  • Insult the patient
  • Become judgmental or deny what is happening

15
More De-escalation
  • Be genuine in your attempts to listen and affirm
    the persons feelings
  • Let him express grievances, but respond
    selectively
  • Speak in a normal tone of voice
  • Communicate in simple sentences
  • Show your concern
  • Clear up misconceptions
  • Acknowledge valid complaints
  • Dont react to abusive statements
  • Offer realistic solutions if appropriate.

16
More De-escalation
  • Set limits calmly but firmly
  • Call for back-up or security before the patients
    behavior escalates to violence
  • Report all near-violent episodes dont blame
    yourself and try to hide it
  • Broken windows theory tolerating lesser
    incidents results in increasingly violent
    behavior

17
Role-PlayingDifficult Cases
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