Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, USA.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2024 Apr;25(4):565-571.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2023.09.023. Epub 2023 Oct 28.
Resident-to-resident aggression (RRA) in long-term care facilities is gaining recognition as a serious problem. Racial/ethnic conflict may be a contributing factor to RRA incidents, but it remains insufficiently studied. Our goal was to explore overt racial/ethnic conflict in RRA.
We used quantitative and qualitative secondary analyses of existing data from a large, rigorously conducted study of RRA to describe the involved residents and patterns of overt racial/ethnic conflicts.
The parent study included information of 2011 residents in 10 randomly selected New York State nursing homes with a wide range of racial/ethnic minority residents (4.2%-63.2%). A subset of 407 residents were involved in RRA.
We re-examined data from the parent study, which used an innovative approach to identify RRA incidents by reconstructing each incident based on residents' self-reports, staff interviews, field observations, and medical chart review. Resident and facility information was collected.
A total of 35 residents (8.6% of those involved in RRA incidents) were identified as involved in overt racial/ethnic conflicts. These residents were more likely to have had less education than residents involved in other types of RRA but not in overt racial/ethnic conflicts. More than half (56.9%) of the 51 incidents of RRA involving overt racial/ethnic conflict between a specific pair of residents occurred repeatedly. Manifestation of racial/ethnic conflicts included physical violence, discrimination, racial/ethnic slurs, stereotypes, and microaggression. Acute precipitants of these incidents included various communal-living challenges and unmet needs at the facility, relational, and individual levels. Psychological and behavioral consequences were also described.
We found a broad range of manifestations, acute precipitants, circumstances surrounding, and consequences of overt racial/ethnic conflicts in RRA. Additional research is needed to improve understanding of this phenomenon and how staff may effectively intervene and prevent it.
长期护理机构中的居民间攻击(RRA)正在被视为一个严重的问题。种族/民族冲突可能是 RRA 事件的一个促成因素,但对其研究仍不够充分。我们的目标是探讨 RRA 中的显性种族/民族冲突。
我们使用定量和定性的二次分析方法,对一项大规模、严格进行的 RRA 研究的现有数据进行分析,以描述涉及的居民和显性种族/民族冲突模式。
该研究的母体包括来自纽约州 10 家随机选择的养老院的 2011 名居民的信息,这些养老院的少数族裔居民比例范围很广(4.2%-63.2%)。一个子样本包括 407 名涉及 RRA 的居民。
我们重新检查了母体研究的数据,该研究采用了一种创新的方法,通过根据居民的自我报告、工作人员访谈、实地观察和病历审查来重建每个事件,从而识别 RRA 事件。收集了居民和设施的信息。
共有 35 名居民(RRA 事件中涉及的居民的 8.6%)被确定为涉及显性种族/民族冲突。这些居民受教育程度低于其他类型的 RRA 但不涉及显性种族/民族冲突的居民。在涉及特定一对居民之间显性种族/民族冲突的 51 起 RRA 事件中,超过一半(56.9%)反复发生。种族/民族冲突的表现包括身体暴力、歧视、种族/民族诽谤、刻板印象和微侵犯。这些事件的急性诱发因素包括各种共同生活的挑战和设施内未满足的需求、关系和个人层面。还描述了心理和行为后果。
我们发现 RRA 中显性种族/民族冲突存在广泛的表现形式、急性诱发因素、周围环境和后果。需要进一步研究以提高对这一现象的理解以及工作人员如何有效干预和预防它。