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Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, Royal Free and University College Medical School (Royal Free Campus), Rowland Hill Street, London NW3 2PF
Department of Psychiatry, Royal Free Hospital, London
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Abstract |
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Safety features of rooms used for clinical interviews were assessed throughout our mental health unit. Following this pilot survey, 12 safety standards were agreed and adopted by a multi-disciplinary audit meeting. Recommendations were disseminated throughout the trust.
Adherence to the accepted standards for interview room safety was assessed at 6 months and 1 year after baseline. Following each assessment, results were presented so that the audit cycle was completed twice.
RESULTS
At 6 months 46 interview rooms were assessed against the 12 accepted standards and many were found to be unsatisfactory. After presentation of these results, the 1 year assessment discovered few changes in safety features of the 50 rooms now being used.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Unsafe rooms compromise the safety of staff and patients and this is clearly unacceptable. The audit process in itself failed as a method of improving standards.
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Introduction |
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Concern for the safety of mental health professionals had also intensified. One study of junior psychiatric doctors found that 25% had been physically assaulted once during their work, and that 8.3% had been attacked twice (Kidd & Stark, 1992). More recent work has suggested that the figure may be higher, with 37% of trainee psychiatrists having sustained a physical attack (Chubb, 1997).
Staff need protection from these violent incidents, and there are a number of possible factors to address. Training in breakaway techniques is important and educational packages to assist staff in reducing aggression may also be of value (Shah & De, 1998). The impact of the clinical environment and its contribution to violent incidents should not be overlooked. The Royal College of Psychiatrists (1998) has made recommendations regarding the relationship between the clinical environment and violent incidents. They emphasise that the likelihood of violence will be reduced if wards are clean, calming, comfortable areas with natural daylight and fresh air. In addressing safety design of interview rooms they suggest several features. Interview rooms should have easily accessible, functioning alarm systems and clear unobstructed exit paths. Attention should be paid to door locks. Should an attack occur, it is important that other staff can enter the room quickly, and locks that could prevent this should be avoided. Rooms should be located close to other staff members in case of emergency, and should not contain objects that could be used as weapons or missiles.
Davies (1989) suggested similar specifications for clinical interview rooms, but made a number of additional recommendations. In particular, the room used should be a designated interview room, rather than having a dual function such as office or storage area. The dual function of such rooms usually compromises their safety features, often by obstructing exits or providing objects that could be used in an attack. Interview rooms should have an unblocked viewing window to allow observation by other staff. A furniture plan for interview rooms that minimises the risk of violence is reproduced in Fig. 1.
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This audit project was prompted by an assault on a junior doctor, in which unsafe room features were felt to have contributed. Interview room safety is a suitable focus for clinical audit: the subject is directly relevant to clinicians, and objective data can be readily collected.
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Method |
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Results |
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Only one room contained all of the 12 safety features at each assessment point and could therefore be considered a safe environment in which to interview patients. At 12 months significantly fewer rooms had clear exit paths (P=0.02) and significantly more rooms contained potential weapons (P=0.04). In contrast, more door locks were now of a safe design (P=0.03). Other measures had not changed significantly. There were still rooms without panic alarms and just over half the rooms had doors without viewing panels. Only 16% had furniture arranged to resemble the suggested safer room plan. When the analysis was restricted to those rooms in use for interviews at both T1 and T2, 44 rooms were eligible for inclusion. This analysis showed no significant changes, apart from an increase in the number of objects available for use as weapons (P=0.03).
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Comments |
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There are a number of possible explanations for these results. Issues relating to finance, staff apathy, management and the process of clinical audit itself may all have contributed, and we recognise that our method had some limitations.
One limitation of the study methodology is the subjective nature of some of the measures, such as décor and cleanliness. Although the same two assessors were used at each stage, this could be a source of bias. In addition, the audit was clinically driven, so all the rooms currently in use for clinical interviews were included at each assessment. This meant that different rooms were included at T1 and T2. However, the analysis of paired data for the rooms that were assessed at both T1 and T2 did not support this explanation.
Some changes may have been limited by financial constraints. The installation of alarm systems, improvement of décor and door lock replacement can all be costly. However, finance cannot explain all the results, since there was little improvement in recommendations without major financial implications, such as furniture layout. Financial concern is also no excuse for compromising staff safety.
In an established unit, some physical changes are also difficult to address. This is particularly true of the requirement for rooms to benefit from natural light. Although room function can be manipulated, so that rooms with natural light are used for clinical purposes, this is not always possible.
An alternative explanation for the lack of change might be a variation in the level of interest in safety issues over time. After the original assault in our unit and presentation of the audit results, concern seemed genuine. Between T0 and T1 there was a significant improvement in the number of interview rooms containing clear escape paths (P=0.02). However, between T1 and T2 there was a subsequent significant deterioration in this safety feature (P=0.02). As time passed without further incident, concern for safety seemed to wane, so that other changes to rooms did not occur. Over time, staff allowed interview rooms to become significantly more cluttered with unnecessary objects and furniture. Although significantly more interview rooms possessed door locks with adequate safety features, a majority (68%) still had unacceptable locks. The change in locks was actually owing to reallocation of rooms used for interviews, rather than the replacement of unsuitable locks, since analysis of the paired data did not suggest any change in lock safety in the rooms assessed at both time points.
Perhaps it is difficult for staff to remain vigilant regarding safety without frequent reminders. It may also be psychologically more comfortable to forget safety issues, rather than to constantly worry about being attacked during the working day.
Some blame for our disappointing results may lie with the process of audit itself. A current national project is examining the reasons why audit may fail, and preliminary discussion has suggested that one factor could be a mismatch between the priorities of management and clinicians (Berger, 1998a,b). Managers may allocate less priority than clinicians to issues of staff safety. This is clearly unacceptable, and we believe that clinicians should ensure that staff safety is pushed to the top of the management agenda. Another criticism is that the process of audit sometimes functions only as an assessment exercise. As a consequence, projects with worthwhile aims can simply result in "reports that end up in a drawer" (Berger, 1998c). Unless clear action plans are formulated during the audit process and individuals are identified to oversee this action, changes are unlikely to be forthcoming.
We believe that the safety features of interview rooms are an important subject for audit. Future audit design should incorporate an active limb, with a clear line of individual responsibility for implementing recommendations. Staff safety should be a major priority for managers, and clinical staff should be encouraged to remain permanently vigilant regarding their own clinical environment when interviewing patients or relatives.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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BERGER, A. (1998b) Action on clinical audit:
progress report. British Medical Journal,
316,
1893-1894.
BERGER, A. (1998c) Action on clinical audit:
progress report 2. British Medical Journal,
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880-881.
CHUBB, H. (1997) Safety awareness among junior psychiatrists and provisions for their safety in the workplace. Psychiatric Bulletin, 21, 80-83.
DAVIES, W. (1989) The prevention of assault on professional helpers. In Clinical Approaches to Violence (eds K. Howells & C. R. Hollin) Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
KIDD, B. & STARK, C. R. (1992) Violence and junior
doctors working in psychiatry. Psychiatric Bulletin,
16,
144-145.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS (1998) Management of Imminent Violence: Clinical Practice Guidelines to Support Mental Health Services. Occasional Paper OP41. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists.
SHAH, A. & DE,T. (1998) The effect of an educational intervention package about aggressive behaviour directed at the nursing staff on a continuing care psychogeriatric ward. International Journal of Geriatric Medicine, 13, 35-40.
WYATT, J.P. & WATT, M. (1995) Violence towards junior doctors in accident and emergency departments. Journal of Accident and Emergency Medicine, 12, 40-42.
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