Du Maolin, Wang Xuemei, Yin Shaohua, Shu Wei, Hao Ruiqi, Zhao Sai, Rao Harish, Yeung Wan-Ley, Jayaram Mahesh B, Xia Jun
School of Public Health, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Jinshan Development District,, Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, China, 010110.
Systematic Review Solutions Ltd, The Ingenuity Centre, The University of Nottingham, Triumph Road, Nottingham, UK, NG7 2TU.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Apr 3;4(4):CD009922. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009922.pub2.
Aggression is a disposition, a willingness to inflict harm, regardless of whether this is behaviourally or verbally expressed and regardless of whether physical harm is sustained.De-escalation is a psychosocial intervention for managing people with disturbed or aggressive behaviour. Secondary management strategies such as rapid tranquillisation, physical intervention and seclusion should only be considered once de-escalation and other strategies have failed to calm the service user.
To investigate the effects of de-escalation techniques in the short-term management of aggression or agitation thought or likely to be due to psychosis.
We searched Cochrane Schizophrenia Group's Study-Based Register of Trials (latest search 7 April, 2016).
Randomised controlled trials using de-escalation techniques for the short-term management of aggressive or agitated behaviour. We planned to include trials involving adults (at least 18 years) with a potential for aggressive behaviour due to psychosis, from those in a psychiatric setting to those possibly under the influence of alcohol or drugs and/or as part of an acute setting as well. We planned to include trials meeting our inclusion criteria that provided useful data.
We used the standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Two review authors inspected all abstracts of studies identified by the search process. As we were unable to include any studies, we could not perform data extraction and analysis.
Of the 345 citations that were identified using the search strategies, we found only one reference to be potentially suitable for further inspection. However, after viewing the full text, it was excluded as it was not a randomised controlled trial.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Using de-escalation techniques for people with psychosis induced aggression or agitation appears to be accepted as good clinical practice but is not supported by evidence from randomised trials. It is unclear why it has remained such an under-researched area. Conducting trials in this area could be influenced by funding flow, ethical concerns - justified or not - anticipated pace of recruitment as well the difficulty in accurately quantifying the effects of de-escalation itself. With supportive funders and ethics committees, imaginative trialists, clinicians and service-user groups and wide collaboration this dearth of randomised research could be addressed.
攻击行为是一种倾向,即无论是否通过行为或言语表现出来,也无论是否造成身体伤害,都有施加伤害的意愿。缓和降级是一种针对行为紊乱或具有攻击性的人群的心理社会干预措施。只有在缓和降级及其他策略未能使服务对象平静下来时,才应考虑诸如快速镇静、身体干预和隔离等二级管理策略。
研究缓和降级技术在短期管理因精神病导致的攻击行为或激越状态中的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane精神分裂症研究组基于研究的试验注册库(最新检索日期为2016年4月7日)。
采用缓和降级技术对攻击行为或激越行为进行短期管理的随机对照试验。我们计划纳入涉及成年人(至少18岁)的试验,这些成年人因精神病而有攻击行为的可能性,包括来自精神科环境中的患者,以及那些可能受酒精或药物影响的患者和/或作为急性病环境一部分的患者。我们计划纳入符合我们纳入标准并提供有用数据的试验。
我们采用了Cochrane预期的标准方法程序。两位综述作者检查了检索过程中识别出的所有研究的摘要。由于我们无法纳入任何研究,因此无法进行数据提取和分析。
在使用检索策略识别出的345条引文中,我们仅发现一条参考文献可能适合进一步审查。然而,在查看全文后,该文献被排除,因为它不是随机对照试验。
对因精神病导致攻击行为或激越状态的人使用缓和降级技术似乎被视为良好的临床实践,但没有随机试验的证据支持。目前尚不清楚为何这一领域的研究如此匮乏。在这一领域开展试验可能会受到资金流动、伦理问题(无论是否合理)、预期的招募速度以及准确量化缓和降级本身效果的难度等因素的影响。有了支持性的资助者和伦理委员会、富有想象力的试验者、临床医生和服务使用者群体以及广泛的合作,这种随机研究的匮乏状况是可以得到解决的。