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Journal Article

Citation

Hage S, van Meijel B, Fluttert FAJ, Berden GF. J. Psychiatr. Ment. Health Nurs. 2009; 16(7): 661-669.

Affiliation

Holland University for Applied Sciences, Research Group Mental Health Nursing, P.O. Box 403, 1800 AK Alkmaar, The Netherlands. berno.vanmeijel@inholland.nl

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2850.2009.01454.x

PMID

19689560

Abstract

This study was aimed to identify the risk factors of aggressive behaviour in adolescents (1318 years), and to describe available intervention strategies. The findings are evaluated on the basis of their implications for nursing practice. Aggressive behaviour in adolescent psychiatric settings is a neglected research area. The consequences of aggressive behaviour on nurses, other patients and the therapeutic environment can be profound. For the development and implementation of innovative intervention strategies aimed at preventing aggressive behaviour in adolescent psychiatric patients, knowledge of risk factors and evidence-based interventions for aggressive behaviour are of the utmost importance. A systematic search of PubMed, Cinahl, PsychINFO and Cochrane Systematic Reviews (19912007) was employed. The risk factors for aggressive behaviour comprise personal and environmental risk factors. Some risk factors can be influenced by nursing intervention strategies. Available intervention programmes range from interpersonal skills training to massage therapy, parent management training, functional family therapy and multi-systemic therapy. The most effective programmes combine interpersonal skills training with parent management training. No specific nursing intervention programmes were found for dealing with aggressive behaviour in adolescent patients. Nursing staff can assist in achieving a systematic improvement in the treatment outcomes of existing intervention programmes for the prevention of aggression. There is a need for specific nursing intervention programmes to deal with aggressive behaviour in adolescent psychiatric settings.


Language: en

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