Centre for Brain and Mental Health Research (CBMHR), Hunter New England Mental Health, University of Newcastle, PO Box 833, Newcastle, NSW, 2300, Australia.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2012 Sep;47(9):1429-40. doi: 10.1007/s00127-011-0448-7. Epub 2011 Nov 9.
Inpatient psychiatric units are dynamic in nature, potentially creating a different treatment experience for each person, which may be difficult to quantify. Among the goals of this multi-centre service evaluation project was an assessment of shift-to-shift changes in unit-level events and their impact on the social-emotional environment.
Over 1 year, various nurse-completed logs were used within the 11 participating Australian psychiatric units (n = 5,546 admissions) to record patient- and unit-level events per shift, including ratings of the overall social-emotional climate using a novel shift climate ratings (SCR) scale (n = 8,176 shifts). These were combined with admission-level patient characteristics to investigate shift climate profiles and correlates.
Occupancy rates averaged 88% and two-thirds of admissions were involuntary. The psychometric performance of the SCR scale was considered to be satisfactory (e.g., high internal consistency, unidimensional factor structure, and evidence of discriminant and predictive validity). A series of hierarchical regressions revealed considerable variation in SCR total scores, with poorer climates being significantly associated with: day/afternoon shifts; higher occupancy levels; higher proportions of experienced staff, and male, older, or involuntary patients; higher rates of less serious aggressive incidents; reporting of additional staffing demands; and unit location in a stand-alone psychiatric hospital.
The day-to-day social-emotional climate can have important consequences for patient engagement and recovery. Improved understanding of the role played by unit, staff and patient characteristics, together with routine monitoring, should facilitate the development and evaluation of targeted interventions to reduce adverse incidents and improve the overall social-emotional climate.
住院精神病病房的性质是动态的,可能会为每个人创造不同的治疗体验,而这种体验很难量化。本多中心服务评估项目的目标之一是评估单元级事件在班次之间的变化及其对社会情感环境的影响。
在一年多的时间里,11 个参与的澳大利亚精神病病房(n=5546 例入院)使用各种护士填写的日志记录每个班次的患者和单元级事件,包括使用新的班次气候评分(SCR)量表(n=8176 班次)对整体社会情感氛围进行评分。这些数据与入院时的患者特征相结合,以调查班次气候特征和相关性。
入住率平均为 88%,三分之二的入院是强制性的。SCR 量表的心理测量性能被认为是令人满意的(例如,内部一致性高,单维因素结构,以及判别和预测有效性的证据)。一系列层次回归显示 SCR 总分存在相当大的差异,较差的气候与以下因素显著相关:白天/下午班次;较高的入住率;经验丰富的工作人员比例较高,以及男性、年龄较大或非自愿入院的患者比例较高;较不严重的攻击事件发生率较高;报告额外的人员配置需求;以及独立精神病院的单位位置。
日常的社会情感氛围可能对患者的参与和康复产生重要影响。更好地了解单位、员工和患者特征所起的作用,以及常规监测,应有助于制定和评估有针对性的干预措施,以减少不良事件和改善整体社会情感氛围。