Literature DB >> 12850116

Discourses of blame: accounting for aggression and violence on an acute mental health inpatient unit.

Anne Benson1, Jenny Secker, Emma Balfe, Maurice Lipsedge, Sarah Robinson, Julian Walker.   

Abstract

The English National Service Framework for Mental Health stipulates that the highest quality of health care should be provided for mental health service users in the most efficient and effective manner. Incidents of aggression and violence militate against achieving that goal, yet such incidents are frequently reported in inpatient settings. Traditionally, research in this area has focused on the extent of the phenomenon, the individual characteristics of those involved and precursors to the incident. For the most part the literature reflects a dualistic, perpetrator/victim conceptualisation of incidents. This study aimed to address the lack of research undertaken from a more systemic perspective by examining how all those involved understood and attributed meaning to violent or aggressive situations and how these attributions justified individual perceptions, reactions and actions. Working from the position that all behaviour, including violent behaviour, has meaning to those involved and can be understood, 16 semi-structured interviews were carried out in one mental health unit. Because only one client was both willing and able to give a full account of an incident, we focus here on two incidents in which that client was involved. Discourse analytic techniques were used to examine her account of the two incidents and those of the staff members involved. Participants discussed key themes from the interviews in terms of several dilemmas: whether the violent or aggressive behaviour was 'mad' or 'bad'; predictable or unpredictable; and had resulted from 'personality' or ' mental illness'. The client and staff discourses were strikingly similar and in each case the central concern was with the attribution of blame. The findings have implications for the professional discourse of mental health care, including the discourse of the current policy agenda, a discourse itself constructed with the primary function of exoneration from and attribution of blame.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12850116     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(02)00460-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  6 in total

1.  Registration of aggressive incidents in an adolescent forensic psychiatric unit and implications for further practice.

Authors:  S Tremmery; M Danckaerts; L Bruckers; G Molenberghs; M De Hert; M Wampers; J De Varé; A de Decker
Journal:  Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2014-03-31       Impact factor: 4.785

2.  Accounting for accountability: a discourse analysis of psychiatric nurses' experience of a patient suicide.

Authors:  Maggie Robertson; Brodie Paterson; Billy Lauder; Rosemary Fenton; John Gavin
Journal:  Open Nurs J       Date:  2010-01-27

3.  Psychiatric nurse reports on the quality of psychiatric care in general hospitals.

Authors:  Nancy P Hanrahan; Linda H Aiken
Journal:  Qual Manag Health Care       Date:  2008 Jul-Sep       Impact factor: 0.926

4.  Differences in Hospitals' Workplace Violence Incident Reporting Practices: A Mixed Methods Study.

Authors:  Rachel Odes; Susan Chapman; Sara Ackerman; Robert Harrison; OiSaeng Hong
Journal:  Policy Polit Nurs Pract       Date:  2022-03-23

Review 5.  Service users' experiences and views of aggressive situations in mental health care: a systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies.

Authors:  Camilla Buch Gudde; Turid Møller Olsø; Richard Whittington; Solfrid Vatne
Journal:  J Multidiscip Healthc       Date:  2015-10-03

Review 6.  Workplace Violence Toward Mental Healthcare Workers Employed in Psychiatric Wards.

Authors:  Gabriele d'Ettorre; Vincenza Pellicani
Journal:  Saf Health Work       Date:  2017-02-06
  6 in total

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