Psychiatric Patients who Abscond from Acute Care. Len Bowers Professor of Psychiatric Nursing Institute of Psychiatry

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Transcription:

Psychiatric Patients who Abscond from Acute Care Len Bowers Professor of Psychiatric Nursing Institute of Psychiatry

AWOL research Literature reviews in 1998 and again in 2010 Exploratory research 1998 Prevention research 2001 Further analytic research 2005 Locked doors research 2007 Literature review on inpatient suicide 2008 Multiple scientific publications

Why is absconding important? Risk of harm to self Suicide Self-harm Self-neglect Risk of harm to others Staff anxiety Disrupted treatment and recovery Cost: NHS and Police Decreased confidence of relatives/carers

Inpatient suicide Numbers declining in England (74 in 2010), but crisis services increased (150 in 2010) Approx. 1/3 following abscond (lower in England, 15% 2010) Agreed leave 1/3 Absence of support and supervision Family conflict On the ward Ligature point removal Use of intermittent observation Areas and times Caringly Vigilant and Inquisitive Admission is an effective suicide prevention intervention

Missing persons Absconds part of a very big picture: care homes, general hospitals, children, the elderly, physically ill people Missing persons are the biggest drain on police time 1/3 Police helicopter time is spent on missing persons Responses become routinised and thoughtless. Repeats are common. There are 1,000 missing person fatalities every year There are still 1,000 unidentified missing persons from past 40 years One in ten of all missing person reports are from hospitals Basic misper activities cost the Police services 1,325 An abscond costs the NHS approx. 200 This doesn t count the impact on the patient and those around them

Definitions and reporting of absconding Context: acute psychiatric care Research definition: missing without permission for >1 hour Detained vs. informal patients (risk) Duration absent Missing vs. Officially reported Police notified for only 47% of absconds Mostly within the first hour, however sometimes they were not contacted until up to 48 hours later

How and when patients leave From the ward directly Via the front door Locked doors, door stops and special observation circumvented (also: out of windows, fire doors, over fences, etc. HiB theory) Shift handover = peak time to leave (NB and attempt suicide) During first few weeks of admission Destination: home

Why patients leave Bored Frightened of other patients Feel trapped and confined Household responsibilities Miss relatives and friends Worried about security of home and property Psychiatric symptoms Angrily leaving vs. Going to Refusers v. Disputers

Absconders: risk indicators Suicide the main risk: 21% of absconding patients had a recorded history of at least one suicide attempt 5% had a history of self mutilation of one form or another 32% were considered by staff to be at risk of self harm 27% were considered to be at risk from the use illicit drugs 16% at risk of self neglect 20% were considered to pose a risk to others 23% had a history of contacts with forensic psychiatry, courts, or prison 5% had been involved in officially reported ward incidents (NB % s overlap)

Actual outcomes N % Harm to self 12 2.4 Harm to others 8 1.6 Property damage 4 0.8 Other 3 0.6 Drug/alcohol use 30 6.0 No harm 441 88.6 Total 498 100.0

Returns to hospital 63% return of own accord 2% returned by ward staff 8% by relatives/friends 13% by the police 23% of those officially reported Sig. more likely to be returned by police if a known risk of harm to self or others Level of response variable 2% other 11% not at all (discharged in absence, placed on leave, still absent at end of research, or lost to follow up)

Prevention: anti-absconding nursing intervention Reduces absconds by 25% Four ward trial 15 ward/hospital implementation Rule clarity: signing in and out book Identification of those at high risk of absconding with targeted nursing time for those at high risk Promoting contact with family and friends Promotion of controlled access to home Careful breaking of bad news Post incident debriefing MDT review following two absconds Impact on suicide? Support provision Timing of suicide

Prevention: hospital environments A high quality physical environment, including secure access to fresh air, reduces the risk of absconding by 12% Impact on suicide? Valuing patients Self esteem and the impact of admission Keeping present in supportive and supervised environment Ligature point removal Doors, windows, sheets, towels, clothing

Prevention: Locking ward doors Upside: suppresses absconding by 25% Downside: low self-esteem, loss of hope, feeling stigmatisation and rejection, anger, prison identity, resistance, institutionalism and dependency Downside: increases aggression, assaults, selfharm and medication refusal Evidence suggests no beneficial impact on inpatient suicide rates

Recommendations Implementation of the anti-absconding intervention Integration into quality improvement methodologies as a bundle Embedding into clinical audit process and continuous reporting Entering into clinical policies and ward staff job descriptions Identification of a ward absconding reduction lead to champion the intervention Absconding reduction a static agenda item at ward team meetings and at supervision of ward managers and at acute care for a Monitoring of training/workbook completion Including into ward induction for new staff Making it stick, wards are high erosion environments! Work towards clear risk communication with graded Police response Intensify support and supervision Intermittent observations, CVI, area/time supervision, night shifts Therapeutic constant observation packages Establish agreed leave support mechanisms The family may be the treatment unit

Looking to the future Absconding trial published 2003, widespread implementation: 2013 Prevention of inpatient suicide work published 2010/11: widespread implementation: not yet, but e-learning available Safewards: results 5 th September 2013, three tier international implementation planned Riddor incidents with HSE: 2014/15 Patient-patient violence: 2014/15 SPICES: 2015/16 Further work upcoming: patient requests, intermittent observation, medication refusal, specific staff effects, restraint near misses