Caravella Rachel A, Ying Patrick, Siegel Carole, Vaughn Rubiahna, Deutch Allison B, Caroff Aviva, Madanes Sharon, Ackerman Marra G, Lewis Crystal
Department of Psychiatry, New York University, Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Department of Psychiatry, New York University, Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY.
J Acad Consult Liaison Psychiatry. 2023 Jul-Aug;64(4):322-331. doi: 10.1016/j.jaclp.2023.04.002. Epub 2023 Apr 13.
De-escalation of behavioral emergencies in the inpatient medical setting may involve restrictive clinical interventions that directly challenge patient autonomy.
We describe a quality improvement framework used to examine associations between patient characteristics and behavioral emergency de-escalation strategies. This project may inform other Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry teams seeking to promote equity in care.
We examined behavioral emergency response team (BERT) management at an urban, tertiary-care medical center in the United States over a 3-year period. BERT data from an existing dataset were combined with demographic information from the hospital's electronic medical record. Race and ethnic identities were categorized as Black, Hispanic, Asian, White, and unknown. BERT events were coded based on the most restrictive intervention utilized per unique patient. Cross-tabulations and adjusted odds ratios from multivariate logistic regression were used to identify quality improvement targets in this exploratory project.
The sample included N = 902 patients and 1532 BERT events. The most frequent intervention reached was verbal de-escalation (n = 419 patients, 46.45%) and the least frequent was 4-point restraints (n = 29 patients, 3.2%). Half of BERT activations for Asian and a third for Hispanic patients required interpreter services. Anxiety and cognitive disorders and 2 BERT interventions, verbal de-escalation, and intramuscular/intravenous/ medications, were significantly associated with race/ethnic category. The most restrictive intervention for BERTs involving Black and Asian patients were verbal de-escalation (60.1%) and intramuscular/intravenous(53.7%), respectively. These proportions were higher compared with other race/ethnic groups. There was a greater percentage of patients from the unknown (6.3%) and Black (5.9%) race/ethnic groups placed in 4-point restraints compared with other groups (3.2%) that did not reach statistical significance. A logistic regression model predicting 4-point restraints indicated that younger age, multiple BERTs, and violent behavior as a reason for BERT activation, but not race/ethnic group, resulted in significantly higher odds.
This project illustrates that a quality improvement framework utilizing existing clinical data can be used to engage in organizational introspection and identify potential areas of bias in BERT management. Our findings suggest opportunities for further exploration, enhanced education, and programmatic improvements regarding BERT intervention; 4-point restraints; interpreter services; and the influence of race on perception of psychopathology.
在住院医疗环境中降低行为紧急情况的级别可能涉及直接挑战患者自主权的限制性临床干预措施。
我们描述了一个质量改进框架,用于研究患者特征与行为紧急情况降级策略之间的关联。该项目可能为其他寻求促进医疗公平的会诊联络精神病学团队提供参考。
我们在美国一家城市三级医疗中心对行为紧急情况应对团队(BERT)在3年期间的管理情况进行了研究。将现有数据集中的BERT数据与医院电子病历中的人口统计学信息相结合。种族和族裔身份分为黑人、西班牙裔、亚裔、白人及未知。BERT事件根据每位独特患者所采用的最具限制性的干预措施进行编码。在这个探索性项目中,使用交叉表和多元逻辑回归调整后的优势比来确定质量改进目标。
样本包括N = 902名患者和1532起BERT事件。最常采用的干预措施是言语降级(n = 419名患者,46.45%),最不常采用的是四点约束(n = 29名患者,3.2%)。亚洲患者中一半的BERT激活事件以及西班牙裔患者中三分之一的此类事件需要口译服务。焦虑和认知障碍以及两种BERT干预措施,即言语降级和肌肉注射/静脉注射/药物治疗,与种族/族裔类别显著相关。涉及黑人和亚洲患者的BERT最具限制性的干预措施分别是言语降级(60.1%)和肌肉注射/静脉注射(53.7%)。与其他种族/族裔群体相比,这些比例更高。与其他未达到统计学显著性的群体(3.2%)相比,来自未知种族/族裔群体(6.3%)和黑人种族/族裔群体(5.9%)的患者被实施四点约束的比例更高。一个预测四点约束的逻辑回归模型表明,年龄较小、多次发生BERT事件以及因暴力行为导致BERT激活,但不包括种族/族裔群体,会导致显著更高的可能性。
该项目表明,利用现有临床数据的质量改进框架可用于进行组织内省,并识别BERT管理中潜在的偏见领域。我们的研究结果为进一步探索、加强教育以及BERT干预、四点约束、口译服务以及种族对精神病理学认知的影响等方面的项目改进提供了机会。