The Attitudes Towards the Use of Restraint and Restrictive Intervention Amongst Healthcare Staff on Acute Medical and Frailty Wards—A Brief Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. What is Restraint?
3. Methodology
4. Frequency of Restraint Use
5. Types of Restraints
6. Harmful Consequences from the Use of Restraints
7. Reasons for the Use of Restraints
8. Attitudes from Healthcare Professionals Towards the Use of Restraints
9. Attitudes Towards the Reasons Why Restraints are Used
10. Staffing Levels and the Use of Restraints
11. Alternatives to Restraint
12. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Direct Restraint | Indirect Restraint |
---|---|
Movable tables | Passive interactions Out-of-reach mobility aids Persistent monitoring [sitters or specials] Lack of response to call bells |
Low chairs | |
Bed rails | |
Restraint belts | |
Bed linen [patients tucked into the bed] | |
Locked doors | |
Awkward bed positioning | |
Bed positioned against a wall | |
Mittens | |
Web spacers | |
Nasogastric tubes fixed in position |
Physical | Urinary and Faecal | Mental |
---|---|---|
Skin Trauma | Constipation Urinary and faecal incontinence | Delirium |
Muscle atrophy | Agitation | |
Limb injury, including fracture | Apathy | |
Skull fracture | Depression | |
Intracranial haemorrhage | Anxiety | |
Nerve injury [radial nerve/brachial plexus] | Aggression | |
Contractures | Frustration | |
Strangulation | Disempowered | |
Asphyxiation | Cognitive decline | |
PTSD |
Staff | Device | Environment |
---|---|---|
Cultural | Maintaining a device in situ | Workload |
Lack of staff | ||
Attitude | Ward layout | |
Coping strategies | Staff management | |
Defensive | Litigation | |
Role perception |
Examples that May Explain Behaviour |
---|
Longstanding routines [going to the kitchen at 6 pm to cook dinner] |
Previous experiences [mine clearance or previous traumatic stress] |
Pain [pain that they cannot verbalise] |
Time frame [what year does the person with dementia think it is?] |
Paranoia [thinking that people are after them, made worse by 1–1 monitoring] |
Fear [strange surroundings, strange people] |
Hallucinations and visions [caused by medication, infection or post-operative delirium] |
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Gunawardena, R.; Smithard, D.G. The Attitudes Towards the Use of Restraint and Restrictive Intervention Amongst Healthcare Staff on Acute Medical and Frailty Wards—A Brief Literature Review. Geriatrics 2019, 4, 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics4030050
Gunawardena R, Smithard DG. The Attitudes Towards the Use of Restraint and Restrictive Intervention Amongst Healthcare Staff on Acute Medical and Frailty Wards—A Brief Literature Review. Geriatrics. 2019; 4(3):50. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics4030050
Chicago/Turabian StyleGunawardena, Ramith, and David G. Smithard. 2019. "The Attitudes Towards the Use of Restraint and Restrictive Intervention Amongst Healthcare Staff on Acute Medical and Frailty Wards—A Brief Literature Review" Geriatrics 4, no. 3: 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics4030050
APA StyleGunawardena, R., & Smithard, D. G. (2019). The Attitudes Towards the Use of Restraint and Restrictive Intervention Amongst Healthcare Staff on Acute Medical and Frailty Wards—A Brief Literature Review. Geriatrics, 4(3), 50. https://doi.org/10.3390/geriatrics4030050