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Journal Article

Citation

Almvik R, Woods P, Rasmussen K. Int. J. Geriatr. Psychiatry 2007; 22(9): 862-867.

Affiliation

St Olav's University Hospital, Forensic department Broset, Centre for Research and Education in Forensic Psychiatry, Trondheim, Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/gps.1753

PMID

17236252

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The Broset Violence Checklist (BVC) assesses confusion, irritability, boisterousness, verbal threats, physical threats and attacks on objects as either present or absent. It is hypothesised that an individual displaying two or more of these behaviours is more likely to be violent in the next twenty-four hour period. This study aims to test the validity of the instrument in geriatric settings and to report on the predictive value of an easy-to-use risk assessment instrument. METHOD: Eight thousand eight hundred and thirty-five BVC observations were completed in two psychogeriatric wards (n = 42 patients) and two special care units for patients with dementia (n = 40 residents). To measure violent incidents the study group was monitored using the Staff Observation Aggression Scale-Revised (SOAS-R). RESULTS: This study disclosed that patients in geriatric wards and residents in nursing homes who are aggressive have higher BVC scores than the non-violent subjects indicating that the BVC does predict violent episodes in these settings. CONCLUSION: From a clinical perspective, it is most important that a prediction aid has good sensitivity, so that most cases are detected and have a high negative predictive value so that most non-cases on the measure are indeed non-cases. Our results indicate that the BVC was able to achieve this goal.

Language: en

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