Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Department of Public Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2022 May 4;17(5):e0266935. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0266935. eCollection 2022.
To understand violence on acute mental health units according to staff and service user perspectives and experiences.
The collateral damage of violence in acute inpatient mental health settings is wide-ranging, impacting on the health and wellbeing of staff and service users, and detrimental to public perceptions of people who are mentally unwell. Despite international research on the topic, few studies have examined psychiatric unit violence from both staff and service user perspectives.
We conducted in-depth interviews with 85 people (42 staff, 43 service users) in four adult acute mental health inpatient units in New Zealand. We undertook a thematic analysis of perspectives on the contributing factors and consequences of violence on the unit.
Both staff and service users indicated violence was a frequent problem in acute inpatient units. Four themes regarding the causes of violence emerged: individual service user factors, the built environment, organisational factors, and the overall social milieu of the unit. Staff often highlighted complexities of the system as causal factors. These included the difficulties of managing diverse service user illnesses within an inadequate and unsafe built environment whilst having to contend with staffing issues and idiosyncrasies relating to rule enforcement. In contrast, service users talked of their needs for care and autonomy not being met in an atmosphere of paternalism, boredom due to restrictions and lack of meaningful activities, enforced medication, and physical confinement as precipitants to violence. Two broader themes also emerged, both relating to empathy. Both staff and service users exhibited 'othering' (characterised by a profound lack of empathy) in relation to acutely unwell individuals. Explanations for violent behaviour on the unit differed between groups, with service users being more likely to attribute unwanted behaviour to contextual factors and staff more likely to 'blame' mental illness. The consequences of violence included stress, physical injury, and a culture of fear and stigma.
Violence in acute inpatient mental health units in New Zealand is a significant, complex, and unresolved problem negatively impacting the therapeutic mission of these settings. Further in-depth qualitative investigations are urgently required into what is experienced as violence by service users, their view of how violence occurs, the role of fear and power relations, and the contributions of the built and organisational environment to all forms of violence to all unit users. A core function of the acute mental health unit is to offer a therapeutic environment for individuals at their most vulnerable. For this to happen, the unit must be a rewarding place to work, and a safe place to be.
从工作人员和服务使用者的角度和经验了解急性精神卫生单位的暴力问题。
在急性住院精神卫生环境中暴力造成的附带损害范围广泛,影响到工作人员和服务使用者的健康和福祉,也不利于公众对精神健康不佳的人的看法。尽管国际上有关于这一主题的研究,但很少有研究从工作人员和服务使用者的角度研究精神病科单位暴力问题。
我们在新西兰四个成人急性精神卫生住院单位对 85 人(42 名工作人员,43 名服务使用者)进行了深入访谈。我们对单位暴力的促成因素和后果进行了主题分析。
工作人员和服务使用者都表示,暴力在急性住院单位是一个频繁发生的问题。出现了四个关于暴力原因的主题:服务使用者个人因素、建筑环境、组织因素和单位的整体社会环境。工作人员经常强调系统的复杂性是因果因素。这些因素包括在一个不充分和不安全的建筑环境中管理各种服务使用者疾病的困难,同时必须应对人员配备问题和与规则执行有关的特殊性。相比之下,服务使用者谈到他们的护理和自主权需求在家长式作风的氛围中没有得到满足,由于限制和缺乏有意义的活动而感到无聊,被迫服药和身体受限是暴力的诱因。还出现了两个更广泛的主题,都与同理心有关。工作人员和服务使用者都表现出对急性精神疾病患者的“他者化”(表现为极度缺乏同理心)。工作人员和服务使用者对单位暴力行为的解释不同,服务使用者更有可能将不受欢迎的行为归因于背景因素,而工作人员更有可能“责怪”精神疾病。暴力的后果包括压力、身体伤害以及恐惧和污名化的文化。
新西兰急性住院精神卫生单位的暴力是一个严重、复杂且未解决的问题,对这些环境的治疗使命产生了负面影响。迫切需要对服务使用者所经历的暴力行为、他们对暴力发生方式的看法、恐惧和权力关系的作用以及建筑和组织环境对所有形式的暴力对所有单位使用者的贡献进行更深入的定性调查。急性精神卫生单位的核心功能是为最脆弱的个人提供治疗环境。为了实现这一目标,单位必须是一个有回报的工作场所,也是一个安全的地方。