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Journal Article

Citation

Papadopoulos C, Ross J, Stewart D, Dack C, James K, Bowers L. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2012; 125(6): 425-439.

Affiliation

Institute for Health Research, University of Bedfordshire, Bedfordshire, UK Faculty of Population Health Sciences, University College London, London, UK Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1600-0447.2012.01827.x

PMID

22268678

Abstract

Papadopoulos C, Ross J, Stewart D, Dack C, James K, Bowers L. The antecedents of violence and aggression within psychiatric in-patient settings. Objective:  To systematically review the types and proportions of antecedents of violence and aggression within psychiatric in-patient settings. Method:  Empirical articles and reports with primary data pertaining to violence and aggression within adult psychiatric in-patient settings were retrieved. For each study, prospective antecedent data were extracted. The extracted antecedent data were thematically analysed, and all higher-level themes were meta-analysed using rate data. Results:  Seventy-one studies met the inclusion criteria, from which 59 distinct antecedent themes were identified and organised into nine higher-level themes. The higher-level antecedent theme 'staff-patient interaction' was the most frequent type of antecedent overall, precipitating an estimated 39% of all violent/aggressive incidents. An examination of the staff-patient interaction themes revealed that limiting patients freedoms, by either placing some sort of restriction or denying a patient request, was the most frequent precursor of incidents, accounting for an estimated 25% of all antecedents. The higher-level themes 'patient behavioural cues' and 'no clear cause' also produced other large estimates and were attributed to 38% and 33% of incidents overall. Conclusion:  This review underscores the influence that staff have in making in-patient psychiatric wards safe and efficacious environments.


Language: en

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