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Evaluation of a novel co‐designed and co‐delivered training package to de‐escalate violence and aggression in UK acute inpatient, PICU and forensic mental health settings.

Authors :
Grundy, Andrew C.
Papastravrou Brooks, Cat
Johnston, Isobel
Cree, Lindsey
Callaghan, Patrick
Price, Owen
Source :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.). Jun2024, p1. 10p. 3 Charts.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Accessible Summary What is known on the subject? What does this paper add to existing knowledge? What are the implications for practice? Background Aim Methods Results Discussion Implications for Practice Relevance Statement Clinical guidelines and staff training recommend using de‐escalation over restrictive practices, such as restraint and seclusion Evidence suggests that restrictive practices continue to be used frequently despite training This suggests a lack of impact of existing staff de‐escalation training. The features of de‐escalation training that are acceptable to staff and perceived to be impactful A co‐designed and co‐delivered training session on a trauma‐informed approach to de‐escalation on mental health wards was acceptable and perceived to be impactful Those attending training particularly valued how lived experience was incorporated into the training content and co‐delivery The organizational and team context may need more consideration in adapting the training. De‐escalation training that adopts a trauma‐informed approach and considers the context of ward environments is acceptable to staff Co‐delivery models of training to tackle restrictive practice can be acceptable and impactful Further research will show how clinically effective this training is in improving outcomes for service users in ward contexts. Evidence suggests a discrepancy between recommended and routine practice in de‐escalation in mental health settings, suggesting a lack of impact of existing training.To investigate the acceptability and perceived impact of a co‐designed/delivered training intervention on a trauma‐informed approach to de‐escalation on mental health wards.Trainees were invited to complete the Training Acceptability Rating Scale (TARS) post‐training. Responses to the quantitative items were summarized using descriptive statistics, and open‐text responses were coded using content analysis.Of 214 trainees, 211 completed the TARS. The trainees rated the training favourably (median overall TARS = 55/63), as acceptable (median 33/36) and impactful (median 23/27). There were five qualitative themes: modules of interest; multiple perspectives; modes of delivery; moulding to context; and modifying other elements.The EDITION training was found to be acceptable and impactful, with trainees particularly valuing the co‐delivery model. Trainees suggested several ways in which the training could be improved, particularly around the need for further moulding of the intervention to the specific ward contexts/teams.We recommend co‐designing and co‐delivering staff training to mental health professionals that tackles restrictive practices.This research is relevant to lived experience practitioners who want to be involved in training mental health professionals around restrictive practices, demonstrating the value and importance of their voice. It is relevant to current providers of de‐escalation training, and to staff receiving training, outlining a novel, but acceptable and impactful, form of training on a key area of mental health practice. It is relevant to anyone with an interest in reducing restrictive practice via co‐delivered training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13510126
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Psychiatric & Mental Health Nursing (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177989740
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jpm.13074