Aim. This paper reports an examination of the relationship between adverse incident rates, the arrival of new junior staff on wards, and days of the week on acute psychiatric wards. Background. Incidents of violence, absconding and self-harm in acute inpatient services pose risks to patients and staff. Previous research suggests that the arrival of inexperienced new staff may trigger more adverse incidents. Findings on the relationship between incidents and the weekly routine are inconsistent. Method. A retrospective analysis was conducted of formally reported incident rates, records of nursing student allocations and junior doctor rotation patterns, using Poisson Regression. Variance between days of the week was explored using con...
To evaluate and describe the physical and mental health of staff on acute psychiatric wards and exam...
Although fairly frequent in psychiatric in-patient, episodes of aggression/violence are mainly limit...
Evidence highlights the intrinsic link between nurse staffing and expertise, and outcomes for servic...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports in examination of the relationship between adv...
Background: Adverse incidents (violence, self-harm and absconding) can cause significant harm to pat...
Contains fulltext : 55388.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background: Ad...
Objective: Reports of violence, and injuries to both staff and patients, in acute psychiatric inpati...
Background: Serious untoward incidents, or sentinel events (suicide, homicide, suicide attempt, seri...
Aggressive behaviour is a critical issue for modern acute psychiatric services, not just because of ...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports a study to investigate the nature and prevalen...
Objective: This paper reports findings from a multicentre service evaluation project conducted in ac...
Background: The link between positive outcomes and qualified nurse staffing levels is well establish...
This literature review forms a background element of a comparative study of two acute psychiatric wa...
Aggression on psychiatric wards develops under influence of patient, staff and ward factors. Assessm...
Purpose This study aimed to examine the relationship between the physical design of mental health ca...
To evaluate and describe the physical and mental health of staff on acute psychiatric wards and exam...
Although fairly frequent in psychiatric in-patient, episodes of aggression/violence are mainly limit...
Evidence highlights the intrinsic link between nurse staffing and expertise, and outcomes for servic...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports in examination of the relationship between adv...
Background: Adverse incidents (violence, self-harm and absconding) can cause significant harm to pat...
Contains fulltext : 55388.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background: Ad...
Objective: Reports of violence, and injuries to both staff and patients, in acute psychiatric inpati...
Background: Serious untoward incidents, or sentinel events (suicide, homicide, suicide attempt, seri...
Aggressive behaviour is a critical issue for modern acute psychiatric services, not just because of ...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports a study to investigate the nature and prevalen...
Objective: This paper reports findings from a multicentre service evaluation project conducted in ac...
Background: The link between positive outcomes and qualified nurse staffing levels is well establish...
This literature review forms a background element of a comparative study of two acute psychiatric wa...
Aggression on psychiatric wards develops under influence of patient, staff and ward factors. Assessm...
Purpose This study aimed to examine the relationship between the physical design of mental health ca...
To evaluate and describe the physical and mental health of staff on acute psychiatric wards and exam...
Although fairly frequent in psychiatric in-patient, episodes of aggression/violence are mainly limit...
Evidence highlights the intrinsic link between nurse staffing and expertise, and outcomes for servic...