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Journal Article

Citation

Wynn R. Nord. J. Psychiatry 2003; 57(6): 453-459.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatric Outpatient Services, Asgård University Hospital of Northern Norway, Tromsø, Norway. rolf.wynn@unm.no

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/08039480310003470

PMID

14630551

Abstract

A questionnaire-based study examining the experiences and attitudes of staff to restraint and seclusion in a Norwegian university psychiatric hospital demonstrated that a majority of staff believed the interventions were used correctly. Staff at wards with high usage of restraint and seclusion, and male staff, were most critical to how often the interventions were used. Most staff favoured the use of physical restraint, although they believed it was the intervention patients were least favourable to. Highly educated staff were not more critical to the use of restraint and seclusion than other staff. Despite the fact that a majority of staff believed that using restraint and seclusion made patients calmer and did not cause aggression, anxiety or injuries, about 70% had been assaulted by patients in connection with the interventions. Many staff believed the use of restraint and seclusion violated patients' integrity, could harm the provider-patient alliance and could frighten other patients. Violence, self-harm and threats were given as main reasons for the use of restraint. Increased staffing and more attention by level-of-care staff were cited as the most important strategies for reducing the use of restraint and seclusion. There is a need for informing all staff about the negative effects of restraint and seclusion and for training staff in less restrictive ways in dealing with aggressive and violent patients.


Language: en

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