Objective: This article aimed to explore the relationship of medication-related conflict [refusal of regular medication, refusal of pro re nata (pm) medication, demanding pm medication] to other conflict behaviours, the use of containment methods, service environment, physical environment, patient routines, staff demographics and staff group variables. Method: The Patient-staff Conflict Checklist (PCC-SR), an end-of-shift report completed by nurses on the frequency of conflict and containment events, was collected for a 6-month period on 136 acute mental health wards in 67 hospitals within 26 NHS Trusts in England, in 2004-2005. Multilevel modelling was used to assess associations with medication-related conflict rates. Results: The mean da...
Aggressive behaviour is a critical issue for modern acute psychiatric services, not just because of ...
There is disagreement among psychiatric professionals about whether the doors of acute psychiatric w...
Background: Conflict (aggression, substance use, absconding, etc.) and containment (coerced medicati...
Background: Disruptive behaviours of acute psychiatric inpatients have typically been studied separa...
OBJECTIVE Attainment of safe, calm inpatient psychiatric wards that are conducive to positive therap...
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to (a) describe what conflict (aggression, absconding etc.) and conta...
Background: The link between positive outcomes and qualified nurse staffing levels is well establish...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports a study to investigate the nature and prevalen...
Conflict and containment on acute inpatient psychiatric wards pose a threat to patient and staff saf...
Psychiatric ward rules: a literature review This literature review forms a background element of a c...
Aggression on psychiatric wards develops under influence of patient, staff and ward factors. Assessm...
Background: Previous research on mental health care has shown considerable differences in use of sec...
This study compared two acute psychiatric ward nursing regimes, focusing on ward rules as a means of...
The administration of medication is an important therapeutic intervention. However, concerns have be...
This literature review forms a background element of a comparative study of two acute psychiatric wa...
Aggressive behaviour is a critical issue for modern acute psychiatric services, not just because of ...
There is disagreement among psychiatric professionals about whether the doors of acute psychiatric w...
Background: Conflict (aggression, substance use, absconding, etc.) and containment (coerced medicati...
Background: Disruptive behaviours of acute psychiatric inpatients have typically been studied separa...
OBJECTIVE Attainment of safe, calm inpatient psychiatric wards that are conducive to positive therap...
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to (a) describe what conflict (aggression, absconding etc.) and conta...
Background: The link between positive outcomes and qualified nurse staffing levels is well establish...
Item does not contain fulltextAim. This paper reports a study to investigate the nature and prevalen...
Conflict and containment on acute inpatient psychiatric wards pose a threat to patient and staff saf...
Psychiatric ward rules: a literature review This literature review forms a background element of a c...
Aggression on psychiatric wards develops under influence of patient, staff and ward factors. Assessm...
Background: Previous research on mental health care has shown considerable differences in use of sec...
This study compared two acute psychiatric ward nursing regimes, focusing on ward rules as a means of...
The administration of medication is an important therapeutic intervention. However, concerns have be...
This literature review forms a background element of a comparative study of two acute psychiatric wa...
Aggressive behaviour is a critical issue for modern acute psychiatric services, not just because of ...
There is disagreement among psychiatric professionals about whether the doors of acute psychiatric w...
Background: Conflict (aggression, substance use, absconding, etc.) and containment (coerced medicati...