Safewards: a new model of conflict and containment on psychiatric wards. Bowers, L. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing, 21(6):499–508, August, 2014.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
Conflict (aggression, self-harm, suicide, absconding, substance/alcohol use and medication refusal) and containment (as required medication, coerced intramuscular medication, seclusion, manual restraint, special observation, etc.) place patients and staff at risk of serious harm. The frequency of these events varies between wards, but there are few explanations as to why this is so, and a coherent model is lacking. This paper proposes a comprehensive explanatory model of these differences, and sketches the implications on methods for reducing risk and coercion in inpatient wards. This Safewards Model depicts six domains of originating factors: the staff team, the physical environment, outside hospital, the patient community, patient characteristics and the regulatory framework. These domains give risk to flashpoints, which have the capacity to trigger conflict and/or containment. Staff interventions can modify these processes by reducing the conflict-originating factors, preventing flashpoints from arising, cutting the link between flashpoint and conflict, choosing not to use containment, and ensuring that containment use does not lead to further conflict. We describe this model systematically and in detail, and show how this can be used to devise strategies for promoting the safety of patients and staff.
@article{bowers_safewards_2014,
	title = {Safewards: a new model of conflict and containment on psychiatric wards},
	volume = {21},
	issn = {1365-2850},
	shorttitle = {Safewards},
	doi = {10.1111/jpm.12129},
	abstract = {Conflict (aggression, self-harm, suicide, absconding, substance/alcohol use and medication refusal) and containment (as required medication, coerced intramuscular medication, seclusion, manual restraint, special observation, etc.) place patients and staff at risk of serious harm. The frequency of these events varies between wards, but there are few explanations as to why this is so, and a coherent model is lacking. This paper proposes a comprehensive explanatory model of these differences, and sketches the implications on methods for reducing risk and coercion in inpatient wards. This Safewards Model depicts six domains of originating factors: the staff team, the physical environment, outside hospital, the patient community, patient characteristics and the regulatory framework. These domains give risk to flashpoints, which have the capacity to trigger conflict and/or containment. Staff interventions can modify these processes by reducing the conflict-originating factors, preventing flashpoints from arising, cutting the link between flashpoint and conflict, choosing not to use containment, and ensuring that containment use does not lead to further conflict. We describe this model systematically and in detail, and show how this can be used to devise strategies for promoting the safety of patients and staff.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {6},
	journal = {Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing},
	author = {Bowers, L.},
	month = aug,
	year = {2014},
	pmid = {24548312},
	pmcid = {PMC4237187},
	keywords = {Aggression, Coercion, Conflict, Psychological, Humans, Inpatients, International, Mental Disorders, Models, Nursing, Pluridisciplinaire, Psychiatric Department, Hospital, Psychiatric Nursing, Restraint, Physical, Royaume-Uni, Safewards model, acute care, aggression, coercion, control and restraint, inpatient issues, sécurisation des services et moindre recours},
	pages = {499--508},
}

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