| Literature DB >> 27515597 |
S A Kinner1, C Harvey2, B Hamilton3, L Brophy4, C Roper5, B McSherry6, J T Young4.
Abstract
AIMS: There are growing calls to reduce, and where possible eliminate, the use of seclusion and restraint in mental health settings, but the attitudes and beliefs of consumers, carers and mental health professionals towards these practices are not well understood. The aim of this study was to compare the attitudes of mental health service consumers, carers and mental health professionals towards seclusion and restraint in mental health settings. In particular, it aimed to explore beliefs regarding whether elimination of seclusion and restraint was desirable and possible.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health; restraint; restrictive practices; seclusion; survey
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27515597 PMCID: PMC6998893 DOI: 10.1017/S2045796016000585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci ISSN: 2045-7960 Impact factor: 6.892
Sample characteristics by group
| Characteristic | Consumers | Carers | Professionals | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 402 (77.3%) | 216 (70.8%) | 217 (70.0%) | 835 (73.6%) | 0.041 |
| Indigenous | 11 (2.1%) | 8 (2.7%) | 2 (0.7%) | 21 (1.9%) | 0.153 |
| Age category | <0.001 | ||||
| 18–30 years | 123 (23.3%) | 33 (10.7%) | 41 (13.1%) | 197 (17.1%) | |
| 31–50 years | 248 (46.9%) | 115 (37.3%) | 143 (45.7%) | 506 (44.0%) | |
| >50 years | 158 (29.9%) | 160 (52.0%) | 129 (41.2%) | 447 (38.9%) | |
| Education | <0.001 | ||||
| ≤Year 12 | 79 (15.0%) | 33 (10.8%) | 3 (0.9%) | 59 (5.2%) | |
| Diploma/certificate | 135 (25.7%) | 43 (14.0%) | 40 (12.9%) | 218 (19.1%) | |
| Tertiary education | 312 (59.3%) | 230 (75.2%) | 268 (86.2%) | 810 (70.9%) | |
| Remoteness | 0.021 | ||||
| Capital city | 311 (60.4%) | 173 (58.0%) | 208 (68.4%) | 692 (61.9%) | |
| Regional | 138 (26.8%) | 95 (31.9%) | 73 (24.0%) | 306 (27.4%) | |
| Rural/remote | 66 (12.8%) | 30 (10.1%) | 23 (7.6%) | 119 (10.7%) | |
| State/territory | 0.104 | ||||
| VIC | 164 (32.3%) | 100 (33.8%) | 96 (31.8%) | 360 (32.6%) | |
| NSW | 145 (28.5%) | 75 (25.3%) | 76 (25.2%) | 296 (26.8%) | |
| QLD | 80 (15.8%) | 35 (11.8%) | 41 (13.6%) | 156 (14.1%) | |
| SA | 51 (10.0%) | 40 (13.5%) | 44 (14.6%) | 135 (12.2%) | |
| WA | 40 (7.9%) | 20 (6.8%) | 18 (6.0%) | 78 (7.0%) | |
| TAS | 5 (1.0%) | 8 (2.7%) | 4 (1.3%) | 17 (1.5%) | |
| ACT | 16 (3.2%) | 8 (2.7%) | 8 (2.7%) | 32 (2.9%) | |
| NT | 7 (1.4%) | 10 (3.4%) | 15 (5.0%) | 32 (2.9%) | |
| Ever observed or affected by the seclusion and restraint of someone else for a mental health issue | 408 (79.7%) | 275 (89.6%) | 283 (93.1%) | 966 (86.0%) | <0.001 |
*Due to missing values, sample size ranges from 1106 to 1150.
Perceived harms by group and type of restraint and seclusion
| Perceived harms (valid | Consumers | Carers | Professionals | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical restraint | |||||
| Often/always infringes on human rights ( | 330 (91.7%) | 190 (88.8%) | 178 (84.8%) | 698 (89.0%) | 0.039 |
| Often/always traumatises or triggers past trauma ( | 343 (91.2%) | 187 (86.6%) | 191 (86.4%) | 721 (88.7%) | 0.106 |
| Often/always compromises therapeutic trust ( | 322 (89.2%) | 179 (85.2%) | 166 (79.4%) | 667 (85.5%) | 0.006 |
| Mechanical restraint | |||||
| Often/always infringes on human rights ( | 308 (92.2%) | 186 (89.9%) | 176 (87.1%) | 670 (90.2%) | 0.156 |
| Often/always compromises therapeutic trust ( | 311 (91.7%) | 180 (89.1%) | 170 (83.7%) | 661 (88.8%) | 0.016 |
| Often/always traumatises or triggers past trauma ( | 313 (88.9%) | 179 (86.9%) | 182 (85.9%) | 674 (87.5%) | 0.536 |
| Chemical restraint | |||||
| Often/always infringes on human rights ( | 305 (86.4%) | 162 (76.8%) | 147 (71.0%) | 614 (79.6%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always compromises therapeutic trust ( | 295 (82.9%) | 148 (72.2%) | 130 (61.9%) | 573 (74.3%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always traumatises or triggers past trauma ( | 251 (69.0%) | 130 (61.9%) | 107 (49.3%) | 488 (61.7%) | <0.001 |
| Emotional restraint | |||||
| Often/always infringes on human rights ( | 305 (91.0%) | 174 (88.8%) | 156 (82.5%) | 635 (88.2%) | 0.014 |
| Often/always compromises therapeutic trust ( | 307 (91.6%) | 171 (86.8%) | 151 (79.5%) | 629 (87.1%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always traumatises or triggers past trauma (N = 750, 65.2%) | 320 (91.4%) | 169 (85.3%) | 148 (73.3%) | 637 (84.9%) | <0.001 |
| Seclusion | |||||
| Often/always infringes on human rights ( | 323 (91.8%) | 183 (85.9%) | 173 (82.4%) | 679 (87.6%) | 0.003 |
| Often/always traumatises or triggers past trauma ( | 325 (88.3%) | 179 (82.5%) | 180 (82.6%) | 684 (85.2%) | 0.071 |
| Often/always compromises therapeutic trust ( | 313 (89.7%) | 168 (80.0%) | 165 (77.8%) | 646 (83.8%) | <0.001 |
Perceived benefits of restrictive practices by group
| Perceived benefit (valid | Consumers | Carers | Professional | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical restraint | |||||
| Often/always increases consumer safety ( | 170 (46.5%) | 126 (60.9%) | 158 (71.8%) | 454 (57.3%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always increases staff/others safety ( | 202 (56.4%) | 133 (64.9%) | 160 (72.1%) | 495 (63.1%) | 0.001 |
| Often/always sets behavioural boundaries ( | 150 (43.9%) | 110 (53.4%) | 132 (62.0%) | 392 (51.5%) | <0.001 |
| Mechanical restraint | |||||
| Often/always increases consumer safety ( | 132 (39.0%) | 108 (54.8%) | 127 (61.3%) | 367 (49.5%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always increases staff/others safety ( | 211 (63.2%) | 131 (66.5%) | 155 (74.9%) | 497 (67.3%) | 0.018 |
| Often/always sets behavioural boundaries ( | 114 (35.2%) | 92 (46.2%) | 100 (50.2%) | 306 (42.3%) | 0.001 |
| Chemical restraint | |||||
| Often/always increases consumer safety ( | 195 (55.2%) | 133 (65.2%) | 167 (77.3%) | 495 (64.0%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always increases staff/others safety ( | 236 (68.0%) | 155 (76.0%) | 187 (85.8%) | 578 (75.2%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always sets behavioural boundaries ( | 119 (35.8%) | 95 (47.0%) | 104 (49.3%) | 318 (42.7%) | 0.003 |
| Emotional restraint | |||||
| Often/always increases consumer safety ( | 64 (19.4%) | 48 (25.3%) | 58 (29.9%) | 170 (23.8%) | 0.022 |
| Often/always increases staff/others safety ( | 103 (32.0%) | 66 (34.9%) | 69 (35.4%) | 238 (33.7%) | 0.672 |
| Often/always sets behavioural boundaries ( | 87 (27.6%) | 70 (36.7%) | 65 (34.0%) | 222 (31.9%) | 0.080 |
| Seclusion | |||||
| Often/always increases consumer safety ( | 156 (44.1%) | 117 (57.1%) | 154 (71.3%) | 427 (55.1%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always increases staff/others safety ( | 214 (62.4%) | 148 (72.2%) | 187 (85.4%) | 549 (71.6%) | <0.001 |
| Often/always sets behavioural boundaries ( | 150 (44.5%) | 105 (52.0%) | 135 (63.7%) | 390 (51.9%) | <0.001 |
Perceived feasibility and desirability of eliminating seclusion and restraint, by group
| Perception of elimination (valid | Consumers | Carers | Professionals | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical restraint | |||||
| Desirable ( | 122 (48.8%) | 53 (34.4%) | 39 (25.0%) | 214 (38.2%) | <0.001 |
| Feasible ( | 87 (34.1%) | 31 (19.1%) | 23 (14.0%) | 141 (24.3%) | <0.001 |
| Mechanical restraint ( | |||||
| Desirable ( | 223 (80.5%) | 118 (72.8%) | 121 (71.6%) | 462 (76.0%) | 0.056 |
| Feasible ( | 199 (73.4%) | 96 (61.9%) | 107 (67.3%) | 402 (68.7%) | 0.044 |
| Chemical restraint | |||||
| Desirable ( | 116 (46.4%) | 53 (35.1%) | 33 (20.1%) | 202 (35.8%) | <0.001 |
| Feasible ( | 93 (35.2%) | 37 (23.4%) | 21 (12.7%) | 151 (25.7%) | <0.001 |
| Emotional restraint | |||||
| Desirable ( | 276 (90.5%) | 137 (87.3%) | 149 (89.8%) | 562 (89.5%) | 0.558 |
| Feasible ( | 234 (82.7%) | 114 (78.1%) | 127 (81.9%) | 475 (81.3%) | 0.498 |
| Seclusion | |||||
| Desirable ( | 177 (66.8%) | 92 (56.8%) | 47 (31.8%) | 316 (55.0%) | <0.001 |
| Feasible ( | 154 (56.8%) | 69 (44.5%) | 40 (24.4%) | 327 (55.4%) | <0.001 |
Association between lived experience and feasibility/desirability of elimination
| Desirable | Feasible | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PRR (95% CI) | APRR (95% CI)* | PRR (95% CI) | APRR (95% CI)* | |
| Physical restraint | ||||
| Professionals | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carers | 1.33 (0.94–1.89) | 1.32 (0.92–1.90) | 1.28 (0.77–2.11) | 1.24 (0.74–2.06) |
| Consumers | 1.88 (1.39–2.54) | 1.72 (1.25–2.36) | 2.30 (1.51–3.49) | 1.87 (1.20–2.91) |
| Mechanical restraint | ||||
| Professionals | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carers | 1.02 (0.89–1.17) | 1.05 (0.91–1.20) | 0.91 (0.77–1.07) | 0.93 (0.78–1.10) |
| Consumers | 1.12 (1.00–1.26) | 1.12 (0.99–1.27) | 1.08 (0.95–1.23) | 1.05 (0.91–1.21) |
| Chemical restraint | ||||
| Professionals | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carers | 1.69 (1.16–2.46) | 1.87 (1.25–2.79) | 1.71 (1.04–2.83) | 1.79 (1.06–3.02) |
| Consumers | 2.23 (1.60–3.12) | 2.25 (1.57–3.23) | 2.71 (1.76–4.18) | 2.13 (1.34–3.37) |
| Emotional restraint | ||||
| Professionals | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carers | 0.98 (0.90–1.06) | 0.99 (0.92–1.08) | 0.96 (0.86–1.07) | 0.97 (0.87–1.09) |
| Consumers | 1.01 (0.95–1.08) | 1.03 (0.95–1.10) | 1.00 (0.91–1.10) | 1.03 (0.93–1.14) |
| Seclusion | ||||
| Professionals | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| Carers | 1.79 (1.36–2.35) | 1.79 (1.35–2.36) | 1.79 (1.29–2.49) | 1.69 (1.21–2.34) |
| Consumers | 2.10 (1.63–2.71) | 1.89 (1.45–2.46) | 2.31 (1.72–3.09) | 2.00 (1.48–2.72) |
PRR, prevalence risk ratio; APRR, adjusted prevalence risk ratio.
*Model adjusted for gender, age, Indigenous status, state of residency, urbanicity and education level.