Reduction of Seclusion and Restraint in an Inpatient Psychiatric Setting: A Pilot Study

The authors describe a quality and safety initiative designed to decrease seclusion/restraint (S/R) and present the results of a pilot study that evaluated the effectiveness of this program. The study sample consisted of consecutive admissions to a 120-bed psychiatric service after the intervention...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatric quarterly 2017-03, Vol.88 (1), p.1-7
Hauptverfasser: Blair, Ellen W., Woolley, Stephen, Szarek, Bonnie L., Mucha, Theodore F., Dutka, Olga, Schwartz, Harold I., Wisniowski, Jeff, Goethe, John W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The authors describe a quality and safety initiative designed to decrease seclusion/restraint (S/R) and present the results of a pilot study that evaluated the effectiveness of this program. The study sample consisted of consecutive admissions to a 120-bed psychiatric service after the intervention was implemented (October 2010–September 2012, n  = 8029). Analyses compared S/R incidence and duration in the study sample to baseline (consecutive admissions during the year prior to introduction of the intervention, October 2008–September 2009, n  = 3884). The study intervention, which used evidence-based therapeutic practices for reducing violence/aggression, included routine use of the Brøset Violence Checklist, mandated staff education in crisis intervention and trauma informed care, increased frequency of physician reassessment of need for S/R, formal administrative review of S/R events and environmental enhancements (e.g., comfort rooms to support sensory modulation). Statistically significant associations were found between the intervention and a decrease in both the number of seclusions ( p  
ISSN:0033-2720
1573-6709
DOI:10.1007/s11126-016-9428-0