Allen M H, Currier G W, Hughes D H, Reyes-Harde M, Docherty J P
University of Colorado School of Medicine, USA.
Postgrad Med. 2001 May(Spec No):1-88; quiz 89-90.
Behavioral emergencies are a common and serious problem for consumers, their communities, and the healthcare settings on which they rely to contain, assess, and ultimately help the individual in a behavioral crisis. Partly because of the inherent dangers of this situation, there is little research to guide provider responses to this challenge. Key constructs such as agitation have not been adequately operationalized so that the criteria defining a behavioral emergency are vague. The significant progress that has been made for some disease states with better treatments and higher consumer acceptance has not penetrated this area of practice. A significant number of deaths of patients in restraint has focused government and regulators on these issues, but a consensus about key elements in the management of behavioral emergencies has not yet been articulated by the provider community. The authors assembled a panel of 50 experts to define the following elements: the threshold for emergency interventions, the scope of assessment for varying levels of urgency and cooperation, guiding principles in selecting interventions, and appropriate physical and medication strategies at different levels of diagnostic confidence and for a variety of etiologies and complicating conditions.
In order to identify issues in this area on which there is consensus, a written survey with 808 decision points was developed. The survey was mailed to a panel of 52 experts, 50 of whom completed it. A modified version of the RAND Corporation 9-point scale for rating appropriateness of medical decisions was used to score options. Consensus on each option was defined as a non-random distribution of scores by chi-square "goodness-of-fit" test. We assigned a categorical rank (first line/preferred choice, second line/alternate choice, third line/usually inappropriate) to each option based on the 95% confidence interval around the mean rating. Guideline tables were constructed describing the preferred strategies in key clinical situations.
The expert panel reached consensus on 83% of the options. The relative appropriateness of emergency interventions was ascertained for a continuum of behaviors. When asked about the frequency with which emergency interventions (parenteral medication, restraints, seclusion) were required in their services, 47% of the experts reported that such interventions were necessary for 1%-5% of patients seen in their services and 32% for 6%-20%. In general, the consensus of this panel lends support to many elements of recent Health Care Financing Administration regulations, including the timing of clinician assessment and reassessment and the intensity of nursing care. However, the panel did not endorse the concept of "chemical restraint," instead favoring the idea that medications are treatments for target behaviors in behavioral emergencies even when the causes of these behaviors are not well understood. Control of aggressive behavior emerged as the highest priority during the emergency; however, preserving the physician-patient relationship was rated a close second and became the top priority in the long term. Oral medications, particularly concentrates, were clearly preferred if it is possible to use them. Benzodiazepines alone were top rated in 6 of 12 situations. High-potency conventional antipsychotics used alone never received higher ratings than benzodiazepines used alone. A combination of a benzodiazepine and an antipsychotic was preferred for patients with suspected schizophrenia, mania, or psychotic depression. There was equal support for high-potency conventional or atypical antipsychotics (particularly liquids) in oral combinations with benzodiazepines. Droperidol emerged in fourth place in some situations requiring an injection.
To evaluate many of the treatment options in this survey, the experts had to extrapolate beyond controlled data in comparing modalities with each other or in combination. Within the limits of expert opinion and with the expectation that future research data will take precedence, these guidelines provide some direction for addressing common clinical dilemmas in the management of psychiatric emergencies and can be used to inform clinicians in acute care settings regarding the relative merits of various strategies.
行为紧急情况对患者及其社区以及他们赖以控制、评估并最终帮助处于行为危机中的个体的医疗保健机构而言,是一个常见且严重的问题。部分由于这种情况存在的固有危险,几乎没有研究可指导医疗服务提供者应对这一挑战。诸如激越等关键概念尚未得到充分的操作化定义,以至于界定行为紧急情况的标准模糊不清。在一些疾病状态方面取得的显著进展,如更好的治疗方法和更高的患者接受度,尚未渗透到这一实践领域。大量约束状态下患者的死亡事件使政府和监管机构关注到这些问题,但医疗服务提供者群体尚未就行为紧急情况管理中的关键要素达成共识。作者召集了一个由50名专家组成的小组来界定以下要素:紧急干预的阈值、针对不同紧急程度和合作水平的评估范围、选择干预措施的指导原则,以及在不同诊断置信度水平下针对各种病因和复杂情况的适当身体和药物策略。
为了确定该领域存在共识的问题,制定了一份包含808个决策点的书面调查问卷。问卷被邮寄给一个由52名专家组成的小组,其中50人完成了问卷。采用兰德公司用于评定医疗决策适宜性的9分制量表的修改版对选项进行评分。通过卡方“拟合优度”检验将每个选项的得分非随机分布定义为达成共识。我们根据平均评分周围的95%置信区间为每个选项指定一个分类等级(一线/首选、二线/替代选择、三线/通常不合适)。构建了指南表,描述关键临床情况下的首选策略。
专家小组对83%的选项达成了共识。确定了一系列行为的紧急干预的相对适宜性。当被问及在其服务中紧急干预(胃肠外用药、约束、隔离)的使用频率时,47%的专家报告称此类干预对于其服务中1% - 5%的患者是必要的,32%的专家认为对于6% - 20%的患者是必要的。总体而言,该小组的共识支持了近期医疗保健财务管理局法规的许多要素,包括临床医生评估和重新评估的时机以及护理强度。然而,该小组不认可“药物约束”的概念,而是倾向于认为即使行为原因尚未完全明了,药物在行为紧急情况中也是针对目标行为的治疗方法。在紧急情况下,控制攻击性行为成为最高优先事项;然而,维护医患关系被评为紧随其后的事项,并在长期内成为首要优先事项。如果有可能使用口服药物,尤其是浓缩剂,显然更受青睐。在12种情况中的6种情况下,单独使用苯二氮䓬类药物的评分最高。单独使用高效常规抗精神病药物的评分从未高于单独使用苯二氮䓬类药物。对于疑似精神分裂症、躁狂症或精神病性抑郁症患者,苯二氮䓬类药物与抗精神病药物联合使用更为可取。在与苯二氮䓬类药物口服联合使用时,高效常规或非典型抗精神病药物(尤其是液体制剂)获得了同样的支持。在一些需要注射的情况下,氟哌利多排在第四位。
为了评估本调查中的许多治疗选项,专家们在相互比较或组合不同方式时不得不超越对照数据进行推断。在专家意见的范围内,并期望未来的研究数据将占主导地位,这些指南为解决精神科紧急情况管理中的常见临床困境提供了一些指导,并可用于告知急症护理环境中的临床医生各种策略的相对优点。