DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
PREVENTION
- Very minor incidents can escalate into a violent situation
- Communicate clearly to minimise escalation
RECOGNITION
Warning signs of impending violence
- Spontaneous self-reporting of angry or violent feelings
- Fluctuating levels of consciousness with prominent persecutory ideas
Carers warn of imminent violence
- Increased restlessness, bodily tension, pacing, arousal
- Increased volume of speech, erratic movements
- Facial expression tense and angry, discontented
- Refusal to communicate, withdrawal
- Unclear thought processes, poor concentration
- Delusions or hallucinations with violent content
- Audible threats, or aggressive gestures
- Recognition of signs apparent in earlier episodes
Context
- Aggression or agitation can occur in:
- psychiatric illness
- physical illness
- substance abuse
- personality disorder
- confusional state irrespective of underlying cause
- patients who have received drugs affecting CNS
ASSESSMENT
- Assessment must be by a fully registered doctor (FY2 or above)
- FY1 doctors must not assess mental capacity
- Inform senior member of medical team (SpR or consultant).
- If there are signs of impending violence, inform site manager who will identify any staff on duty who have been trained in restraint techniques
Personal (staff member's own) behaviour
- Maintain adequate distance
- Move towards safe place, avoid corners
- Explain intentions to patient and others
- Be calm, self-controlled, confident
- Ensure own body language is non-threatening
- Avoid sudden movements
Safety
- Do not attempt to deal with a violent patient on your own
- Keep other patients clear
- Keep other staff clear but within helping distance
- If possible, move patient to a quiet area
Assess using verbal de-escalation
- Engage in conversation, acknowledge concerns and feelings
- Ask for reasons for disquiet, encourage reasoning
- Ask for any weapon to be put down (not handed over)
- If patient too disturbed for such measures, or fails to respond:
- consider physical restraint by trained staff and/or police (see below)
History
- Try to take a history from the patient and those who know the patient
- ask whether this has happened before and how it was handled
- ask about any regular psychotropic medication
Mental state examination
- General appearance and behaviour of patient
- Speech
- Attention and concentration
- Mood: subjective and objective
- Thought: evidence of loosening of association
- irrelevant thoughts, delusions, thoughts of self-harm or harm to others
- Hallucinations
- Evidence of cognitive impairment
- Insight
Assess risk factors for violence
- Young, male, history of violence
- Alcohol or other substance misuse, irrespective of other diagnosis
- Poor compliance with suggested treatments
- Antisocial, explosive or impulsive personality traits
- Active symptoms of psychosis or mania, in particular with:
- delusions or hallucinations focused on a particular person
- delusions of control, particularly with a violent theme
- specific preoccupation with violence
- agitation, excitement, overt hostility or suspiciousness
Assess mental capacity (Mental Capacity Act 2005)
- Assessment is task/decision specific.
- The legal definition of someone who cannot make autonomous decisions is one who is unable to undertake the following:
- understand information about proposed treatment, its purpose and why it is being proposed
- retain that information long enough to be able to make a decision
- use or weigh that information as part of decision-making process
- communicate his/her decision - by any means possible (e.g. talking, using sign language or other means)
- See Capacity section in Consent - Basics guideline
Any doubt or disagreement?
- An application to the court will be necessary. Seek advice
Physical examination
- If safe to do so, gain patient's consent and attempt to record vital signs and NEWS score and a thorough physical examination
- look for sources of infection and/or neurological deficits
- if unsafe, document reasons and carry out examination once stable
IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
Principles
- If acute mental illness suspected (e.g. psychosis or hypomania), refer to mental health liaison team or on-call psychiatrist via switchboard
- If patient aged ≥65 yr and has delirium = acute confusional state, see elderly care section of Delirium (acute confusional state) in older people guideline
- If patient has symptoms and signs of alcohol withdrawal, see Alcohol withdrawal guideline
- If patient intoxicated, but fit to be arrested and taken into custody, request police assistance by dialling 9-999 and say clearly 'I am in fear of my safety'
- If none of the above applies, options available depend on patient's mental capacity. See Capacity section in Consent - Basics guideline
Capable of making decisions
- Hold patient accountable for his/her actions
- Manage underlying cause of agitation
- Do not administer medication without patient's consent
Patient lacks capacity
- Ensure that any intervention used is the least harmful or restrictive of patient's basic rights and freedom
- immediately necessary, reasonable, and in their best interest
- Conduct multidisciplinary discussion to decide whether sedation is safe and appropriate - see medication below
- Take all necessary means to prevent injury to self, other staff or patients, or damage to property
- consider use of physical restraint and/or medication - see below
- Manage underlying cause of agitation
Physical restraint
Decision
- The use of any physical holding is the last resort
- once staff attempt to restrain a patient, a threatening situation may turn violent
- Assessment must be by a fully registered doctor (FY2 or above)
- the person taking action must reasonably believe that restraint is necessary to prevent harm to the person who lacks capacity or staff and other patients
- Use restraint only if there are sufficient staff, appropriately trained (see below), to achieve this effectively and you perceive imminent danger because patient is:
- displaying prolonged and serious verbal abuse, threatening staff, or disrupting ward
- threatening or attempting self-injury
- at risk of prolonged over-activity with risk of exhaustion
- at risk of serious accident to self and/or others
- attempting to abscond if detained under Section and in an open ward
Who to undertake restraint?
- Request assistance from any staff on duty trained in physical restraint techniques and who have completed the clinical holding course/update
- inform site manager who will identify any staff trained in restraint; input from security can be requested
- medical and nursing staff without appropriate training should not attempt to physically restrain the individual
- Best practice guidance is in addition to one staff to observe and communicate, a further minimum of 2 staff to hold someone and 3 staff if the person is held on the floor
- If no suitably trained staff available, or patient is making significant physical attacks or serious efforts to destroy property, leave the scene immediately and request police assistance by dialling 9-999 and say clearly 'I am in fear of my safety'
- the police will always respond to a call for assistance, but are not allowed to assist in restraining patients for treatment
When patient restrained
- Any holding must be reasonable and proportional to the circumstances
- Do not, under any circumstance, inflict deliberate pain
- Wherever possible, avoid holding someone on the floor (particularly in the prone position).
- Hold in any position for the minimum amount of time possible to manage the prevailing or perceived level of risk
Medication
Principles
- If new brain damage suspected, avoid medication until after CT scan.
- Check prescription chart for previously prescribed drugs.
- Reduce dosages of medication appropriately in the elderly or infirm
- Try to persuade patient to accept oral medication
- if this is not possible, use parenteral route (do not mix two drugs in a syringe)
Elderly
- If patient is elderly (aged ≥65 yr) refer to Delirium (acute confusional state) in older people guideline especially for doses of medication
- olanzapine and risperidone can cause serious side effects including strokes in older patients
- do not use aripiprazole
- Unless dose for elderly is specified below, halve doses of medication for older people
Substance abuse
- Treat any symptoms suggestive of withdrawal - see Withdrawal of drug(s) of dependence guideline
Sedation
- Do not prescribe beyond BNF limits, and be aware of the cumulative effect of combination medications
- Recommended medication options are:
- lorazepam (prefer as first choice) 1 mg oral/IM repeated 6-hrly if necessary - adult maximum dose 4 mg in 24 hr (elderly 0.5 mg; maximum 2 mg in 24 hr)
- for IM injection, dilute lorazepam with an equal volume of water for injection or sodium chloride 0.9%
- use IM only when patient refuses to take orally
- If no response 1 hr after oral lorazepam, give oral olanzapine 10 mg (avoid in elderly patients) or risperidone 1-2 mg (elderly 0.5 mg)
- If 1-2 mg of lorazepam (elderly 0.5-1 mg) used, have flumazenil to hand in case of respiratory depression
- flumazenil dose: 100 micrograms IV over 15 sec, then 100 micrograms every 1 min, if required; usual dose 300–600 micrograms, maximum 1 mg per course
- If oral medication fails, consider lorazepam IM treatment
- Alternatives are aripiprazole 10 mg PO [9.75 mg IM (not for the elderly)], promethazine 50 mg or as a last resort, and only after an ECG has been checked, consider haloperidol 5 mg oral/IM
- do not use haloperidol in patients with Parkinson’s disease, heart disease or if patient has a prolonged QT interval or taking other drugs that prolong QT interval
- if using haloperidol, have procyclidine available in case of dystonic reaction
- procyclidine dose: 5-10 mg IV or IM, usually effective in 5-10 min; in elderly start with 5 mg
- If no response to 2 forms of medication, seek advice from mental health liaison team or on-call psychiatrist via switchboard
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- Monitor vital signs
- Record BP, pulse, respiratory rate, hydration, and pulse oximeter every 15 minutes for first hour and then every hour for 4 hours
- Record level of consciousness until fully conscious
- Record ECG at first available opportunity
Documentation
- Record incident clearly and fully afterwards
- Complete an adverse incident/Datix report with witness statements
- Record further care plan
Once stable
- Continue close observation as inpatient for at least 24 hr
- Reassess mental state and review patient's status under Mental Health Act
- Continue management of underlying condition
- When transferring patient between units, send details of:
- incident
- medication management
- subsequent management plan
- any unwanted effects
- any advance directives
Last reviewed: 2024-03-14