Deering Kris, Wagstaff Chris, Kyle Richard G, Bermingham Ivor, Williams Jo, Pawson Chris
Nursing Academy: University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon, UK.
Institute of Clinical Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2025 Jul;34(4):e70104. doi: 10.1111/inm.70104.
Recovery during admission to acute mental health hospitals can involve supporting individuals in beginning to work towards a fulfilling life despite experiencing mental distress. This can help reduce risks such as suicide and aggression. However, restrictive risk management practices, such as physical restraint may increase during this period, and the distress caused by these practices can hinder a person's abilities to understand their recovery needs. Little is known about how recovery can occur safely within the context of such risk management restrictions. Therefore, this constructivist grounded theory study explored the perspectives of 15 individuals with hospital admission experiences about how they might begin their recovery journeys amidst these constraints. The study found that people could reconnect with their beliefs about a fulfilling life vicariously through interpersonal relationships. This facilitated a sense-making process allowing individuals to better understand their recovery needs which were otherwise obscured by the complexity and intrusiveness of risk management practices. The theory comprised of four social processes: 'treating me safely,' when nurses began to understand those admitted as individuals; 'outside world inside,' which involved nurses helping the person to form meaningful connections to their personal world; 'tangible hopefulness,' where nurses raised the person's awareness of meaningful successes; and 'scaffolding recovery,' which built on the previous three processes, with the nurses helping individuals recognise the potential for working towards a fulfilling life. The study shows how supporting a relational approach to care may lessen people feeling unsafe when admitted to hospital, despite experiencing potentially distressing risk management practices.
在急性精神卫生医院住院期间的康复过程可能包括支持个体在经历精神痛苦的情况下开始朝着充实的生活努力。这有助于降低自杀和攻击等风险。然而,在此期间,诸如身体约束等限制性风险管理措施可能会增加,而这些措施所造成的痛苦会阻碍一个人理解其康复需求的能力。对于在这种风险管理限制的背景下如何安全地实现康复,人们知之甚少。因此,这项建构主义扎根理论研究探讨了15名有住院经历的个体对于在这些限制条件下如何开始他们的康复之旅的看法。研究发现,人们可以通过人际关系间接地重新找回他们对充实生活的信念。这促进了一个意义建构的过程,使个体能够更好地理解他们的康复需求,否则这些需求会被风险管理措施的复杂性和侵扰性所掩盖。该理论由四个社会过程组成:“安全对待我”,即护士开始将入院者视为个体来理解;“外界融入内心”,即护士帮助患者与他们的个人世界建立有意义的联系;“切实的希望”,即护士提高患者对有意义的成功的认识;以及“搭建康复框架”,它建立在前三个过程的基础上,护士帮助个体认识到朝着充实生活努力的潜力。该研究表明,尽管存在可能令人痛苦的风险管理措施,但支持一种以关系为导向的护理方法可能会减轻人们住院时的不安全感。