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Conflict and containment in psychiatry

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Patients chosen randomly, 10 per ward, and were assisted by a research assistant when necessary ... Low conflict and high therapy environments ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Conflict and containment in psychiatry


1
Conflict and containment in psychiatry
  • Len Bowers,
  • Professor of Psychiatric Nursing
  • City University, London

2
Where I come from
  • Population 59 million
  • 8 belong to an ethnic minority African,
    Caribbean, South Asian (and Turkish)
  • Secular only 38 believe in God
  • 1.8 million Muslims
  • Famous for industrial revolution, empire,
    scientific advances, slave trade, football,
    colonialism, generally interfering with everyone
    else, etc.

3
Psychiatry in the UK
  • Countrywide state funded psychiatric hospitals
    started in 1840s
  • Steady growth in size till WW2
  • Decreased in size thereafter, with initiation of
    community care
  • Closure of large old asylums, coupled with move
    of staff into community teams

4
Springfield hospital
5
Typical unit now
  • Psychiatric unit within the grounds of a general
    hospital
  • Short stay admission wards only
  • Sectorised each ward serves a locality
  • Some specialist services elderly, children,
    adolescents, forensic

6
c75,000 local population
Community mental health team
Acute ward 20 beds 20 nurses
Crisis team
Assertive outreach team
Residential care
Admissions for Risk (self/others) Assessment Trea
tment Physical care
More than 500 wards like this in England alone
7
Perceived problems
  • 200 inpatient suicides every year
  • Inter-patient sexual harassment and assaults
  • Violence to staff, occasionally serious
  • Absconding
  • Over-occupancy in some places
  • 15 staff vacancy rate
  • High staff turnover
  • Blame culture
  • Quality of care

8
Psychiatric nurses in the UK
  • Three year direct entry training at University
    Diploma or Degree level
  • 66 female
  • Modal age group 30-39 years (30)
  • Acute in-patient wards 50/50 qualified and
    unqualified nurses
  • Minimum starting salary for a qualified nurse is
    19,683 (46,452 TL)

9
What in-patient nurses do
  • Prevent and manage patients harming themselves
    and others through 24/7 supervision and
    containment
  • Contribute to assessment of mental state,
    diagnosis, self-care capability, etc.
  • Deliver treatment, mainly medication, but also a
    program of patient activities
  • Assist with self-care and deliver physical health
    care
  • Care management and liaison

10
Post-basic and in service training (examples)
  • Prevention and management of violence and
    aggression
  • Medication management
  • Risk assessment
  • Psychosocial interventions, family work, CBT and
    other therapies
  • Dual diagnosis
  • Further academic courses masters, doctorates

11
Conflict and containment research at City
University
  • Conflict violence, aggression, absconding,
    medication refusal, rule breaking, drug/alcohol
    use, etc.
  • Containment security policies, manual
    restraint, seclusion, special observation,
    coerced IM medication, etc.
  • 12 years, gt 2 million (5 million TL) grant
    income, gt 50 publications, many projects

12
Evaluations of different containment methods
13
Physical restraint
14
PRN medication
15
Net bed
16
Mechanical restraint
17
Time out
18
Straightjacket
19
Methods
  • Collected Attitude to Containment Methods
    Questionnaires (ACMQ)
  • 1,226 staff (mostly nurses and HCAs) and 1,361
    patients on 136 wards completed the
    questionnaires
  • Patients chosen randomly, 10 per ward, and were
    assisted by a research assistant when necessary

20
Acceptability of containment
21
More containment
  • PRN meds, time out and intermittent observation
    the most acceptable to patients
  • Mechanical restraint not acceptable, but here
    staff were more extreme in their rejection than
    patients
  • Experience of observation improved patient
    ratings, experience of seclusion or coerced IM
    medication had the opposite effect
  • Staff approved more of those methods they had
    used
  • Male staff approved more of containment in general

22
Conclusions and questions
  • Patients and staff comprehensively reject
    mechanical restraint
  • Intermittent observation is highly acceptable (as
    well as being associated with lower self-harm)
  • The nature of that connection might therefore
    also be through respectful valuing of patients
  • We need to avoid coerced IM medication and
    seclusion wherever possible (but how?)
  • Do we have a gender related problem with male
    staff?

23
Absconding
24
Absconding exploratory study
  • Profiled the absconder (175 absconders and 159
    controls)
  • Young
  • Male
  • Schizophrenia
  • Medication refusal
  • Previously absconded
  • Reasons for absconding (62 patient interviews)
  • Bored
  • Frightened of other patients
  • Feel trapped and confined
  • Household responsibilities
  • Miss relatives and friends
  • Worried about security of home and property
  • Reasons for and patterns of absconding defined an
    anti-absconding strategy

25
Absconding reduction
  • Before and after study of five acute wards
  • Overall a significant 25 reduction in absconding
    achieved
  • Door locking decreased
  • Preparation of handbook, workbooks, poster, cards
  • 15 wards completed an audit, 3 months before and
    after measures
  • 25 decrease in absconding

26
Tompkins Acute Ward Study
27
Methods
  • Longitudinal study
  • 4 years official data on admissions, workforce
    deployment, adverse incidents
  • 2 years prospectively collected data repeated
    interviews, questionnaires, and measure of
    conflict and containment
  • More than 300 interviews and 15,000
    questionnaires

28
Adverse incidents
  • Findings
  • Incidents associated with each other
  • Surges in admissions precipitate incidents
  • Days before and after ward rounds
  • Weekends 20 fewer incidents
  • Same patients
  • Consume staff availability
  • Increase uncertainty

29
Staffing resources
  • Findings
  • Attendance on 5-day prevention and management of
    violence course is associated with more incidents
    on the ward
  • Total staff absence in related to a greater
    number of adverse incidents
  • Regular staff absence reduces support or
    stability of the ward atmosphere, leading to
    incidents

30
Patients feelings of safety and security
31
Method
  • Interview schedule created by a service user
    consultant in combination with various user
    groups
  • Topic patients feelings of safety and security
    on the ward
  • A patient was randomly chosen for interview on
    every other ward, until a total of 60 was reached
  • Interviews taped, transcribed and analysed to
    themes

32
Findings
  • Two-thirds felt no threat from other patients,
    and just under half found staff to be supportive
    and able to keep them safe
  • The greatest day-to-day irritation was petty
    thieving
  • Intimidation and bullying occurred, mainly for
    cigarettes and money
  • There was a strong culture of patients helping
    each other, which was highly valued led to
    discharge grief (suicide risk?)
  • Patients who denied they had a need to be there
    saw nothing positive about any aspect of their
    stay

33
Working model 1
34
Peace on the wards
  • Low conflict and high therapy environments
  • Low rates of violence, abuse, self-harm,
    absconding, rule breaking, etc.
  • Low containment use, i.e. less seclusion,
    sedation, observation, security measures,
    restraint, etc.
  • Greater therapeutic activity and interaction
  • Positive impact on staff

35
Three key processes
  • Positive appreciation
  • Emotional self regulation
  • Effective structure

36
Foundations
  • Psychiatric philosophy
  • Moral commitments
  • Emotional self-management
  • Technical mastery
  • Teamwork skill
  • Organisational support

37
www.citypsych.com
  • Research reports
  • Details of our research programme
  • List of published research papers
  • Masterclass video clips on acute psychiatric
    nursing
  • A short story about inpatient care
  • Details of the international internet
    psychiatric-nursing mailing list
  • Availability of anti-absconding package
  • Further information L.Bowers_at_city.ac.uk
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