| Literature DB >> 26491343 |
Camilla Buch Gudde1, Turid Møller Olsø2, Richard Whittington3, Solfrid Vatne4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Aggressive situations occurring within mental health services can harm service users, staff, and the therapeutic environment. There is a consensus that the aggression phenomenon is multidimensional, but the picture is still unclear concerning the complex interplay of causal variables and their respective impact. To date, only a small number of empirical studies include users' views of relevant factors. The main objective of this review is to identify and synthesize evidence relating to service users' experiences and views of aggressive situations in mental health settings.Entities:
Keywords: aggression; inpatient; mental health; service user experiences; user involvement; violence
Year: 2015 PMID: 26491343 PMCID: PMC4599636 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S89486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Figure 1Search and selection strategy.
Quality assessment of included studies
| Qualitative studies | CASP qualitative quality criteria met | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | |
| Bensley et al (1995) | ✓ | ✘ | ✘ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✘ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Benson et al (2003) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Bonner et al (2002) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Carlsson et al (2006) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Hinsby and Baker (2004) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Johnson et al (1997) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Johnson and Delaney (2007) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Kumar et al (2001) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Meehan et al (2006) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Quirk et al (2004) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ✘ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Duxbury and whittington (2005) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||||
| Ilkiw-Lavalle and Grenyer (2003) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||||||
| Omerov et al (2004) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✘ | ||||||
Notes: Symbols: ✓, yes; ✘, no/cannot tell.
CASP qualitative studies: A: aims clearly stated; B: appropriate methodology; C: appropriate design to address the aims of the research; D: appropriate recruitment strategy; E: data collected in a way that addressed the research issue; F: adequate consideration of relationship between researcher and participants; G: consideration of ethical issues; H: sufficiently rigorousness in data analysis; I: findings clearly stated; J: consideration of relevance and transferability of the research;
MMAT (mixed method studies): 1: relevant design; 2: relevant integration of data; 3: appropriate considerations; 4: appropriate criteria for qualitative/quantitative components.
Abbreviations: CASP, Critical Appraisal Skills Programme; MMAT, Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.
Characteristics of studies and themes identified in thematic analysis of service users’ experiences and views of aggressive situations, listed alphabetically
| Author (year) | Study focus/aim | User participants and study location | Data collection and data analysis related to user experiences | Key findings reported by author | Codes identified by reviewer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bensley et al (1995) | To identify areas causing friction between patients and staff | 69 patients, eight wards on two different state psychiatric hospitals, USA. Sex represented approximately equally, age from young adult to geriatric population | Qualitative interviews with patients Counts of number of wards on which each major topic had been discussed | Main issues believed to contribute to assault: smoking policies and access to outdoors, lack of respect from staff, excessive use of seclusion, and not enough explanation of rules | Contributory conditions: rigid and hierarchical ward structure; lack of respect and dialogue |
| Benson et al (2003) | To examine how all involved (n=3) understood and attributed meaning to violent or aggressive situations and how these attributions justified individual perceptions, reactions, and actions | One female patient involved in two incidents, acute mental health inpatient unit, UK | Qualitative, semi-structured interviews. Discourse analytic techniques | Client and staff discourses were strikingly similar, and their most central concern was the attribution of blame | Contributory conditions: reactivation of earlier negative experiences; lack of care and respect from staff; ignored |
| Bonner et al (2002) | To investigate factors found helpful and unhelpful, during and in the aftermath of manual physical restraint. And to investigate what had happened and any precipitants in the recent incident | Six mental health patients involved in six incidents, UK | Qualitative, semi-structured interviews. Analyzed by the technique of Miles and Huberman | The patients valued staff time and attention but felt that they received too little attention. They reported feeling upset, distressed, and ignored prior to the incidents and isolated and ashamed afterward. Post-incident debriefing was valued, but rare | Contributory conditions: mental symptoms; unpredictable and hostile milieu; rigid ward structure; not understood, misinterpreted, and ignored by staff |
| Carlsson et al (2006) | Aims to describe the essence of violent encounters, as experienced by patients | Nine patients from psychiatric hospital ward (n=4) and forensic hospital (n=5), Sweden | Qualitatively guided by phenomenological method. Analyzed within a reflective lifeworld approach | Explicate violent encounters characterized by a tension between “authentic personal”and “detached impersonal” caring. The first refers to encounters marked by openness, and unrestricted respect toward patients as human beings. The latter to encounters experienced as uncontrolled and unsecure, with elevated risks and potential for violence | Contributory conditions: lack of engagement, understanding, and impersonal care; lack of dialogue; ignored; rigid rules and routines Preventive conditions: sensitive, attentive, and caring staff; respect, real dialogues |
| Duxbury and Whittington (2005) | To compare the views of patients and staff on causes of aggression and to explore perspectives on management approaches | 82 inpatients, female (n=42), from three mental health care wards: a psychiatric intensive care unit, a high dependency ward, and an acute ward, UK | Mixed method. Quantitative survey with questionnaire. Qualitative follow-up interviews with a subsample of patient respondents (n=5). Content analysis for semi- structured interviews | Interviews: patients were dissatisfied with a restrictive and under-resourced provision that leads to interpersonal tension (interviews) | Contributory conditions: rigid and hierarchical ward structure; not supportive, sensitive, and responsive; lack of care and respect Preventive conditions: real dialogues |
| Hinsby and Baker (2004) | To explore patients’ and nurses’ accounts of violent incidents | Four male patients from a medium- secure unit, UK | Qualitative, semi-structured interviews. Analyzed by both grounded theory and a discursive approach | Despite an increased sensitivity to contextual factors, they generally were able to control their behavior but occasionally reacted violently to an overload of environmental stressors. Institutional control exercised during violent incidents perceived as punishment | Contributory conditions: mental symptoms; unpredictable and hostile milieu; rigid and hierarchical ward structure |
| Ilkiw-Lavalle and Grenyer (2003) | To examine the views of patients and staff involved in incidents of aggression to help understand emotions experienced, perceptions of causes, current management and ways of reduction | 29 patients from four psychiatric inpatient units involved in incidents of aggression over a 4-month period, Australia | Mixed method, semi-structured interviews analyzed with phenomenological “bracketing” of the researchers’ expectations. Significant statements were organized into themes | Patients perceived illness, interpersonal factors, and environmental factors as being almost equally responsible for their aggression, and nearly all patients emphasized the need for improved staff–patient communication and more flexible unit rules in helping reduce aggression None of the patients reported a formal defusing or debriefing session | Contributory conditions: mental symptoms; unpredictable and hostile milieu; lack of dialogue; rigid and hierarchical ward structure |
| Johnson et al (1997) | To increase the understanding of the experiences of individuals with thought disorders, which precede incidents of aggression | 12 patients from two psychiatric hospitals: a tertiary care psychiatric hospital and a general hospital with a psychiatric unit, Canada | Qualitative, individual interviews, analyzed according to the method described by Giorgi, which was adapted to an approach to content analysis | Participants perceived themselves to be strongly affected by the external environment. They perceived themselves to be both powerful and powerless. The aggressive incident occurred in spite of the participants’ acknowledgment and previous use of anger-controlling strategies | Contributory conditions: lack of privacy and space; locked up; unpredictable and hostile milieu; not understood, misinterpreted, and ignored |
| Johnson and Delaney (2007) | To understand the context and conditions that influence how nursing staff manage patients who are escalating out of control | 12 patients, six female, age range 22–56 years, from two locked psychiatric units, all involved at some point in escalating situations, USA | Qualitative, observation study and interviews guided by grounded theory. Data collection and analysis conducted simultaneously as consistent with grounded theory methods | Although a particular incident has appeared suddenly and without a seemingly precipitant, patients revealed in interviews causes that might be unknown to staff. Several instances of low-level irritation hours or days before the eruption | Contributory conditions: mental symptoms; negative feelings toward staff and ward |
| Kumar et al (2001) | To elicit service users’ experience of violence within the mental health system | Six outpatients, four male, with a history of hospitalization and experiences of violence as perpetrators, witness, and/or victims, UK | Qualitative, focus group, 90 minutes, recorded. Grounded theory approach, guided by Strauss and Corbin | Six core themes were identified: i) “imbalance of power” (exists in the mental health system), ii) violence has psychological sequelae, iii) mental health services are not geared to help victims of “institutional violence”, iv) the present mental health system fosters violence, v) a radical change is needed in the infrastructure of the mental health system, and vi) reinforcement and reforms may come from parallel efforts | Contributory conditions: unpredictable and hostile milieu; early signs ignored; lack of respect; not supportive, sensitive and responsive; rigid and hierarchical ward structure; not understood, misinterpreted, and ignored by staff |
| Meehan et al (2006) | To elicit patients’ perceptions and experiences of aggressive behavior in the ward and potential strategies to minimize such behavior | 27 patients, five female, from two wards on a high-secure forensic unit, Australia | Qualitative, five focus group discussions with 4–7 participants. Semi- structured interview schedule. Content analysis | Cause of aggression: the environment, empty days, staff interactions, medical issues, and patient-centered factors Strategies for prevention: early intervention, provision of meaningful activities, separation of acutely disturbed patients, improved staff attitudes, implementation of effective justice procedures, and patient advocate | Contributory conditions: unpredictable and hostile milieu; lack of privacy and space; lack of meaningful activities; rigid and hierarchical ward structure; not understood, misinterpreted, and ignored by staff; mental symptoms |
| Omerov et al (2004) | To compare staff members’ and psychotic patients’ experiences of the same violent incident | 41 patients, 24 women, age range 20–65 years, from two psychosis wards. Participants had been involved in violent incidents, Sweden | Mixed method, qualitative interviews conducted with patients according to questionnaire. Statistical analysis | 37 patients (90%) reported being provoked prior to the incident, by staff (73%), medication (34%), or by relatives/other patients (17%). Staff members were able to identify <50% of the provocations experienced by the patients | Contributory conditions: rigid and hierarchical ward structure; not supportive, sensitive, and responsive; lack of respect |
| Quirk et al (2004) | Focus on how service users cope in acute psychiatric wards and strategies used to manage the risk they face or pose to others | Study A: users on three acute wards in different psychiatric hospitals during a period of 3 years. Study B: users at 96 psychiatric units, including 73 acute wards, UK | Ethnographic study. Study A: grounded theory approach guided data collection, sampling, and analysis. Study B: content analysis with use of NUD*IST software | Many risks, such as physical assault, are attributable to other patients. Interplay between a range of interactional and contextual factors, that is, low staffing levels/minimal or poor surveillance. Users were found to employ strategies to manage risk on the ward | Contributory conditions: unpredictable and hostile milieu; lack of privacy and space; not taken seriously; lack of sensitivity and respect |