Publication | Closed Access
The reported experience of four women with intellectual disabilities receiving emergency psychiatric services in Canada
36
Citations
26
References
2009
Year
Hospital Emergency DepartmentsDisabilityEmergency Department AdministrationMental HealthDevelopmental DisabilitiesEmergency CareEmergency Psychiatric ServicesHospital MedicineIntellectual ImpairmentDisability StudyDevelopmental DisabilityPsychiatryEmergency Medicine TraumaIntellectual DisabilitiesEmergency VisitEmergency MedicineNursingPatient SafetyLocal Emergency DepartmentOut-of-hospital Emergency Medical ServiceSocial Emergency MedicineMedicineReported Experience
Hospital emergency departments are not well prepared to meet the needs of individuals with intellectual disabilities. Negative experiences can be very traumatic, particularly when the emergency visit is because of a behavioural or psychiatric problem. A focus group study was conducted in 2005 in Toronto, Canada with four women with intellectual disabilities who had paid repeated visits to their local emergency department due to a psychiatric or behavioural crisis. These women spoke about not feeling respected, the trauma of being restrained physically or chemically, and about hospital staff not being comfortable working with women with intellectual disabilities. Clinical implications are discussed and recommendations are presented to improve the experience of women who require emergency services in the future.
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