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Journal ArticleDOI

Ward crowding and incidents of violence on an acute psychiatric inpatient unit.

Bradley Ng, +3 more
- 01 Apr 2001 - 
- Vol. 52, Iss: 4, pp 521-525
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TLDR
Crowding was found to be significantly associated with aggressive incidents, and in particular with verbal aggression, on an acute inpatient unit in rural New Zealand.
Abstract
Objective: Violence in psychiatric wards is common, and it is on the rise. This study examined the relationship between ward occupancy level and staff-to-patient ratio and incidents of aggressive behavior, both physical and verbal, on an acute inpatient unit in rural New Zealand. Methods: Logistic regression was used to analyze data collected from the ward’s log of adverse incidents and the ward census over a 12-month period. A physical incident was defined as an unwelcome physical contact or willful damage to property. Incidents of self-harm were excluded. Verbal aggression was any threat of physical or sexual harm. Results: Among 381 admissions during the study period, 58 incidents were recorded—25 incidents of verbal aggression and 33 incidents of physical violence. Logistic regression demonstrated that the occupancy level was positively associated with the occurrence of any type of violent incident. The average occupancy level when an incident occurred was 77 percent, compared with 69 percent when no incidents occurred. The average occupancy level was significantly higher when verbal incidents occurred (80 percent) than when physical incidents occurred (70 percent). No association was found between violence and staff-to-patient ratio. Incidents were significantly more likely to occur during the afternoon shifts (3 p.m. to 11 p.m.). Conclusions: Crowding was found to be significantly associated with aggressive incidents, and in particular with verbal aggression. (Psychiatric Services 52:521–525, 2001)

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Citations
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Psychiatric ward design can reduce aggressive behavior

TL;DR: A conceptual model proposing that aggression in psychiatric facilities may be reduced by designing the physical environment with ten evidence-grounded stress-reducing features was tested in a newer hospital in Sweden having wards with nine of the ten features.
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Adverse incidents in acute psychiatric inpatient units: rates, correlates and pressures

TL;DR: Findings from a multicentre service evaluation project conducted in acute psychiatric inpatient units in NSW, Australia are suggestive of the need for a multi-level approach to intervention, shifting from a risk management focus during the early phase of hospitalization to a more targeted, therapeutic approach during the later phase.
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Resident-to-Resident Aggression in Long-Term Care Facilities: An Understudied Problem.

TL;DR: The importance of designing effective interventions, despite the lack currently available, is described, and the potential areas of future research are suggested, including issues surrounding cognitive impairment.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Overt Aggression Scale for the objective rating of verbal and physical aggression.

TL;DR: The authors describe the design and reliability of a rating scale that measures aggressive behaviors in adults and children and the clinical and research applications of this scale are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Study of Violent Behaviour Among Patients in Psychiatric Hospitals

TL;DR: It was found that many incidents of petty violence occurred and serious violence was rare among psychiatric in-patients in three hospitals and the vast majority of patients were nonviolent.
Journal ArticleDOI

Staff observation aggression scale, SOAS: Presentation and evaluation

TL;DR: A new psychiatric report and rating scale assessing severity and frequency of aggressive behaviour is presented and evaluated and is thought to be a potentially useful tool in scientific research on aggressive behaviour from psychiatric inpatients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Violence and Aggression in Psychiatric Units

TL;DR: The frequency and types of these behaviors in acute psychiatric inpatient settings were examined, and potential interactions between staffing and patient mix and rates of the behaviors were explored.
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