University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2024 Nov 28;24(1):857. doi: 10.1186/s12888-024-06261-6.
Safety incidents are common in adult acute inpatient mental health services, and detrimental to all. Incidents spread via social contagion within the ward, but social contagion is difficult to quantify. Better measures of social contagion could support a milieu in which safety incidents are less likely to be prolonged, spread, or repeated, with widespread benefits. The WardSonar project, based in the United Kingdom (UK), developed and evaluated a prototype digital safety monitoring tool to collect real-time information from patients on acute adult mental health wards, about their perceptions of ward safety. A prototype Wardsonar tool was developed from a collaborative, co-design approach, and implemented in real-world hospital settings. The current study aimed to understand whether the tool can help to predict incidents, by examining (i) the feasibility of capturing real-time feedback from patients about safety and (ii) how the resulting data related to quality and safety metrics. This study was registered as ISRCTN14470430 on 10/January/2022.
Patients can record real-time perceptions of ward safety using the tool, and staff can access these as anonymous, aggregated data. The tool was implemented in the UK in six National Health Service adult acute mental health wards. A novel approach to analysis involved construction of an hour-by-hour dataset over each ward. This revealed relationships between quantity and content of patient reports, staffing, time of day, and ward incidents, per ward.
There is strong evidence that an incident leads to increased probability of further incidents within the next four hours. This supports the idea of social/behavioural contagion and puts a measure on the extent to which the contagion persists. COVID-19 impacted the research processes.
There is potential to use the WardSonar digital tool for proactive real-time safety monitoring, to identify developing incidents and help staff to facilitate timely preventative or de-escalating interventions. Further refinement and testing in a post COVID-19 context are needed.
ISRCTN14470430 https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN14470430 . Registered 10/January/2022.
安全事故在成人急性住院精神卫生服务中很常见,对所有人都有不利影响。事故在病房内通过社交传播蔓延,但社交传播很难量化。更好的社交传播衡量标准可以支持一个环境,在这个环境中,安全事故不太可能延长、传播或重复,从而带来广泛的好处。英国的 WardSonar 项目开发并评估了一种原型数字安全监测工具,从急性成年精神卫生病房的患者那里实时收集有关他们对病房安全感知的信息。Wardsonar 工具原型是通过合作、共同设计的方法开发的,并在现实医院环境中实施。本研究旨在通过检查(i)从患者那里实时收集有关安全的反馈的可行性,以及(ii)由此产生的数据与质量和安全指标的关系,来了解该工具是否有助于预测事故。本研究于 2022 年 1 月 10 日在 ISRCTN14470430 上注册。
患者可以使用该工具实时记录对病房安全的感知,工作人员可以以匿名、汇总数据的形式访问这些数据。该工具在英国的六家 NHS 成人急性精神卫生病房实施。一种新的分析方法涉及为每个病房构建一个小时到小时的数据集。这揭示了每个病房的患者报告数量和内容、工作人员配备、一天中的时间和病房事故之间的关系。
有强有力的证据表明,事故会导致接下来的四个小时内发生进一步事故的可能性增加。这支持了社交/行为传播的观点,并对传播的持续程度进行了量化。COVID-19 影响了研究过程。
有可能使用 WardSonar 数字工具进行主动实时安全监测,以识别正在发展的事件,并帮助工作人员及时进行预防性或降级干预。需要在 COVID-19 后背景下进行进一步的改进和测试。
ISRCTN14470430 https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN14470430 。于 2022 年 1 月 10 日注册。