Barnicot Kirsten, Insua-Summerhayes Bryony, Plummer Emily, Hart Alice, Barker Chris, Priebe Stefan
Department of Medicine, Centre for Psychiatry, Imperial College London, Commonwealth Building, Du Cane Road, London, W12 0NN, UK.
Department of Medicine, Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London, WC1E 7HB, UK.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2017 Apr;52(4):473-483. doi: 10.1007/s00127-017-1338-4. Epub 2017 Feb 4.
Continuous observation of psychiatric inpatients aims to protect those who pose an acute risk of harm to self or others, but involves intrusive privacy restrictions. Initiating, conducting and ending continuous observation requires complex decision-making about keeping patients safe whilst protecting their privacy. There is little published guidance about how to balance privacy and safety concerns, and how staff and patients negotiate this in practice is unknown. To inform best practice, the present study, therefore, aimed to understand how staff and patients experience negotiating the balance between privacy and safety during decision-making about continuous observation.
Thematic analysis of qualitative interviews with thirty-one inpatient psychiatric staff and twenty-eight inpatients.
Most patients struggled with the lack of privacy but valued feeling safe during continuous observation. Staff and patients linked good decision-making to using continuous observation for short periods and taking positive risks, understanding and collaborating with the patient, and working together as a supportive staff team. Poor decision-making was linked to insufficient consideration of observation's iatrogenic potential, insufficient collaboration with patients, and the stressful impact on staff of conducting observations and managing risk.
Best practice in decision-making about continuous observation may be facilitated by making decisions in collaboration with patients, and by staff supporting each-other in positive risk-taking. To achieve truly patient-centred decision-making, decisions about observation should not be influenced by staff's own stress levels. To address the negative impact of staff stress on decision-making, it may be helpful to improve staff training, education and support structures.
对精神科住院患者进行持续观察旨在保护那些对自身或他人构成急性伤害风险的患者,但这涉及到侵犯隐私的限制措施。启动、实施和结束持续观察需要在保障患者安全的同时保护其隐私方面做出复杂的决策。关于如何平衡隐私和安全问题,几乎没有公开的指导意见,而且工作人员和患者在实际中如何协商这一问题也尚不清楚。因此,为了为最佳实践提供参考,本研究旨在了解工作人员和患者在关于持续观察的决策过程中如何体验隐私与安全之间平衡的协商。
对31名精神科住院部工作人员和28名住院患者进行定性访谈,并进行主题分析。
大多数患者因缺乏隐私而感到困扰,但重视在持续观察期间感到安全。工作人员和患者将良好的决策与短期使用持续观察、承担积极风险、理解并与患者合作以及作为一个支持性的工作人员团队共同努力联系起来。决策不当与对观察的医源性潜在影响考虑不足、与患者合作不够以及观察实施和风险管理对工作人员的压力影响有关。
与患者合作做出决策,以及工作人员在承担积极风险方面相互支持,可能有助于促进关于持续观察的决策的最佳实践。为了实现真正以患者为中心的决策,关于观察的决策不应受工作人员自身压力水平影响。为解决工作人员压力对决策的负面影响,改善工作人员培训、教育和支持结构可能会有所帮助。