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Physical restraint of patients in acute mental health care settings : patient, staff, and enviromental factors associated with the use of a horizontal restraint position.

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Physical restraint of patients in acute mental health care settings : patient, staff, and enviromental factors associated with the use of a horizontal restraint position. / Whittington, R.; Lancaster, Gillian A.; Meehan, C. et al.
In: Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology, Vol. 17, No. 2, 06.2006, p. 253-265.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Whittington R, Lancaster GA, Meehan C, Lane S, Riley D. Physical restraint of patients in acute mental health care settings : patient, staff, and enviromental factors associated with the use of a horizontal restraint position. Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology. 2006 Jun;17(2):253-265. doi: 10.1080/14789940600645753

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@article{0d2a30c5cedc40159ad3be674e4d177d,
title = "Physical restraint of patients in acute mental health care settings : patient, staff, and enviromental factors associated with the use of a horizontal restraint position.",
abstract = "Physical restraint of potentially violent patients can take place on the floor in prone or supine positions (horizontal restraint) or, less intrusively, in standing or sitting positions (vertical restraint). The decision to use horizontal restraint may be made unnecessarily if the level of risk in an interaction is overestimated and/or the capacity to otherwise control the situation is underestimated by staff. A model of the decision-making process in this situation based on the concept of cognitive appraisal of imminent threat is proposed here. The aim of the study reported here was to test this model by examining the patient, staff, and environmental factors associated with the use of horizontal (as opposed to vertical) restraint. Logistic regression analysis of secondary data on the first-recorded episode of restraint of 261 patients occurring over a three-year period (1999 - 2001) in an acute care psychiatric trust in the UK was conducted, followed by a ROC analysis of the discriminative ability of the derived model to predict horizontal restraint. It was found that patients admitted under Section 2 of the Mental Health Act, those committing self-harm, and those with unclear thoughts and increased vocal volume prior to the incident were more likely to be restrained horizontally. Older people, those with perceived rational causation such as bad news and personal gain, and those with no obvious warning signs were less likely to be restrained horizontally. The AUC of the model was .76 (95% CI .70 - .82), indicating acceptable discriminative ability. It is concluded that certain patient characteristics and certain staff appraisals of pre-incident behaviour are associated with an increased risk of horizontal restraint.",
keywords = "Aggression, violence, physical restraint, prone restraint, appraisal",
author = "R. Whittington and Lancaster, {Gillian A.} and C. Meehan and S. Lane and D. Riley",
year = "2006",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1080/14789940600645753",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "253--265",
journal = "Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology",
issn = "1478-9949",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical restraint of patients in acute mental health care settings : patient, staff, and enviromental factors associated with the use of a horizontal restraint position.

AU - Whittington, R.

AU - Lancaster, Gillian A.

AU - Meehan, C.

AU - Lane, S.

AU - Riley, D.

PY - 2006/6

Y1 - 2006/6

N2 - Physical restraint of potentially violent patients can take place on the floor in prone or supine positions (horizontal restraint) or, less intrusively, in standing or sitting positions (vertical restraint). The decision to use horizontal restraint may be made unnecessarily if the level of risk in an interaction is overestimated and/or the capacity to otherwise control the situation is underestimated by staff. A model of the decision-making process in this situation based on the concept of cognitive appraisal of imminent threat is proposed here. The aim of the study reported here was to test this model by examining the patient, staff, and environmental factors associated with the use of horizontal (as opposed to vertical) restraint. Logistic regression analysis of secondary data on the first-recorded episode of restraint of 261 patients occurring over a three-year period (1999 - 2001) in an acute care psychiatric trust in the UK was conducted, followed by a ROC analysis of the discriminative ability of the derived model to predict horizontal restraint. It was found that patients admitted under Section 2 of the Mental Health Act, those committing self-harm, and those with unclear thoughts and increased vocal volume prior to the incident were more likely to be restrained horizontally. Older people, those with perceived rational causation such as bad news and personal gain, and those with no obvious warning signs were less likely to be restrained horizontally. The AUC of the model was .76 (95% CI .70 - .82), indicating acceptable discriminative ability. It is concluded that certain patient characteristics and certain staff appraisals of pre-incident behaviour are associated with an increased risk of horizontal restraint.

AB - Physical restraint of potentially violent patients can take place on the floor in prone or supine positions (horizontal restraint) or, less intrusively, in standing or sitting positions (vertical restraint). The decision to use horizontal restraint may be made unnecessarily if the level of risk in an interaction is overestimated and/or the capacity to otherwise control the situation is underestimated by staff. A model of the decision-making process in this situation based on the concept of cognitive appraisal of imminent threat is proposed here. The aim of the study reported here was to test this model by examining the patient, staff, and environmental factors associated with the use of horizontal (as opposed to vertical) restraint. Logistic regression analysis of secondary data on the first-recorded episode of restraint of 261 patients occurring over a three-year period (1999 - 2001) in an acute care psychiatric trust in the UK was conducted, followed by a ROC analysis of the discriminative ability of the derived model to predict horizontal restraint. It was found that patients admitted under Section 2 of the Mental Health Act, those committing self-harm, and those with unclear thoughts and increased vocal volume prior to the incident were more likely to be restrained horizontally. Older people, those with perceived rational causation such as bad news and personal gain, and those with no obvious warning signs were less likely to be restrained horizontally. The AUC of the model was .76 (95% CI .70 - .82), indicating acceptable discriminative ability. It is concluded that certain patient characteristics and certain staff appraisals of pre-incident behaviour are associated with an increased risk of horizontal restraint.

KW - Aggression

KW - violence

KW - physical restraint

KW - prone restraint

KW - appraisal

U2 - 10.1080/14789940600645753

DO - 10.1080/14789940600645753

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 253

EP - 265

JO - Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology

JF - Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology

SN - 1478-9949

IS - 2

ER -