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Clinical decision-making about inpatient violence risk at admission to a public-sector acute psychiatric hospital.
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Citations
35
References
2012
Year
Psychiatric EvaluationClinical Decision-makingViolence AssessmentMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesHospital MedicineViolenceNonviolent PatientsPsychiatryViolent CrimeForensic PsychiatryOffender ClassificationMental Health ProfessionalNursingPsychological ViolencePatient SafetyInpatient Violence RiskViolent PatientsMedicineAggressionPsychopathologyEmergency Medicine
This is an examination of the extent to which patients who are violent in the hospital can be distinguished from nonviolent patients, based on information that is readily available at the time of admission to a state acute psychiatric hospital. The charts of 235 inpatients were examined retrospectively, by selecting 103 patients who had engaged in inpatient violence and comparing them with 132 randomly selected patients who had not during the same period. Data were gathered from initial psychiatric assessment and admissions face sheets in patients' charts, reflecting information available to a mental health professional within the first 24 hours of a patient's admission. Multivariate analysis showed that violent and nonviolent patients were distinguished by diagnosis, age, gender, estimated intelligence, psychiatric history, employment history, living situation, and agitated behavior. These factors led to an 80 percent correct classification of violent patients and thus may assist clinicians to structure decision-making about the risk of inpatient violence.
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