Limit setting is an intervention that is frequently used by mental health nurses. However, limit setting is poorly conceptualized, its purpose is unclear, and there are few evidence-based guidelines to assist nurses to set limits in a safe and effective manner. What is known is that the manner in which nurses set limits influences patients' perceptions of the interactions and their emotional and behavioural responses. In this qualitative study, 12 nurses and 12 patients participated in personal, semistructured interviews that aimed to explore limit setting and to propose principles to guide practice. The findings suggested that: (i) limit setting is important to safety in mental health hospitals; (ii) engaging patients in an empathic manner...
Purpose: Nurses working in forensic psychiatry often encounter offenders who have a severe mental il...
There is a paucity of literature around 'conditioning' processes prior to boundary transgressions. T...
The complexity of the therapeutic relationship is amplified when the setting is a prison and the pat...
Limit-setting and de-escalation are commonly used nursing interventions that are critical to the eff...
Background:\ud Several published research studies have suggested that inpatient aggression against n...
The task of enforcing behavioural limits in mental health settings is widely regarded as necessary b...
The authors discuss the importance and the necessity of stablishing limits as therapeutic tool in th...
psychiatric settings is frequently associatedwith the quality of staff-patient interactions. Impulsi...
Aim: Investigate patient perspectives on barriers and enablers to the use and effectiveness of de‐es...
Background Despite the use of restrictive measures in mental healthcare to keep patients and staff s...
BackgroundViolence and other harms that result from conflict in forensic inpatient mental health set...
Objective: To explore experiences of restrictive practices from the perspectives of acute care inpat...
Coercive practices, such as physical restraint, are used globally to respond to violent, aggressive ...
Background: De-escalation techniques are recommended to manage violence and aggression in mental hea...
Physical restraint of people experiencing mental health problems is a coercive and traumatic procedu...
Purpose: Nurses working in forensic psychiatry often encounter offenders who have a severe mental il...
There is a paucity of literature around 'conditioning' processes prior to boundary transgressions. T...
The complexity of the therapeutic relationship is amplified when the setting is a prison and the pat...
Limit-setting and de-escalation are commonly used nursing interventions that are critical to the eff...
Background:\ud Several published research studies have suggested that inpatient aggression against n...
The task of enforcing behavioural limits in mental health settings is widely regarded as necessary b...
The authors discuss the importance and the necessity of stablishing limits as therapeutic tool in th...
psychiatric settings is frequently associatedwith the quality of staff-patient interactions. Impulsi...
Aim: Investigate patient perspectives on barriers and enablers to the use and effectiveness of de‐es...
Background Despite the use of restrictive measures in mental healthcare to keep patients and staff s...
BackgroundViolence and other harms that result from conflict in forensic inpatient mental health set...
Objective: To explore experiences of restrictive practices from the perspectives of acute care inpat...
Coercive practices, such as physical restraint, are used globally to respond to violent, aggressive ...
Background: De-escalation techniques are recommended to manage violence and aggression in mental hea...
Physical restraint of people experiencing mental health problems is a coercive and traumatic procedu...
Purpose: Nurses working in forensic psychiatry often encounter offenders who have a severe mental il...
There is a paucity of literature around 'conditioning' processes prior to boundary transgressions. T...
The complexity of the therapeutic relationship is amplified when the setting is a prison and the pat...