Evans Cara, Deljavan Sevil, Zimmermann Kayla, Allen Kristy, Moghimi Elnaz, Canning Christopher
Waypoint Research Institute, Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care, Penetanguishene, ON, Canada.
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Front Psychiatry. 2025 Jan 15;15:1509946. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1509946. eCollection 2024.
Forensic mental health care is intended to promote recovery and reintegration, but is often experienced by patients as punitive and aversive. Forensic patients are rarely engaged in research to explore what matters most to them, and little guidance exists on how this engagement may be facilitated. In this paper, we explore perceived determinants of readiness to implement forensic patient-oriented research in a high-secure setting.
Following a period of engagement with staff and patients in the high-secure setting, we conducted interviews with 30 staff members (including clinicians, researchers, and hospital leaders) and five patients. We analyzed interviews using a thematic analysis approach. Coding was initially informed by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, and subsequent iterations of analysis extended beyond this framework to explore patterns of meaning encompassing multiple implementation domains.
We identified three themes in our data: "Navigating a climate of distrust, discrimination, and restricted autonomy"; "Hearing and interpreting patient voices"; and "Experiencing a slow shift in the tide." The first two themes represent potential challenges, including distrust and stigma; inherent restrictions in forensic care, and perceptions that patient autonomy threatens staff safety; patient fears of repercussions; and barriers to valuing and understanding patient voices. The third theme describes the ongoing shift towards patient-centredness in this setting, and participants' interest in proceeding with forensic patient-oriented research.
Increased attention to relationship-building, trauma-informed principles, and epistemic injustice (i.e., unfair devaluing of knowledge) in high-secure settings can support the involvement of forensic patients in research.
法医精神卫生保健旨在促进康复和重新融入社会,但患者往往将其体验为惩罚性和厌恶的。法医患者很少参与探索对他们最重要的事情的研究,而且对于如何促进这种参与也几乎没有指导。在本文中,我们探讨了在高度戒备环境中开展以法医患者为导向的研究的意愿的感知决定因素。
在与高度戒备环境中的工作人员和患者进行一段时间的接触后,我们对30名工作人员(包括临床医生、研究人员和医院领导)和5名患者进行了访谈。我们采用主题分析方法对访谈进行了分析。编码最初以实施研究综合框架为依据,随后的分析迭代超出了该框架,以探索涵盖多个实施领域的意义模式。
我们在数据中确定了三个主题:“在不信任、歧视和自主权受限的氛围中前行”;“倾听和解读患者声音”;以及“经历潮流的缓慢转变”。前两个主题代表了潜在挑战,包括不信任和耻辱感;法医护理中的固有限制,以及认为患者自主权会威胁工作人员安全的观念;患者对后果的恐惧;以及重视和理解患者声音的障碍。第三个主题描述了在这种环境中朝着以患者为中心的持续转变,以及参与者对推进以法医患者为导向的研究的兴趣。
在高度戒备环境中更多地关注建立关系、创伤知情原则和认知不公正(即对知识的不公平贬低)可以支持法医患者参与研究。