On Being Open in Closed Places: Vulnerability and Violence in Inpatient Psychiatric Settings.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING
Cat Papastavrou Brooks, Isobel Johnston, Erinn Gilson
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Abstract

High levels of violence and conflict occur in inpatient psychiatric settings, causing a range of psychological and physical harms to both patients and staff. Drawing on critiques of vulnerability from the philosophical literature, this paper contends that staff's understanding of their relationship with patients (including how they should respond to violence and conflict) rests on the dominant, reductive account of vulnerability. This account frames vulnerability as an increased susceptibility to harm and so regards 'invulnerable' staff's responsibility to be protecting and managing vulnerable patients. We offer an alternative view of vulnerability as an openness and capability to be changed, which illuminates how the common account of vulnerability is used to justify staff's coercive power over patients and to control staff behaviour. Our main argument is that staff's adoption of this negative approach to vulnerability is associated with a range of factors that are connected to the violence and conflict endemic to these settings. Staff's need to situate themselves as invulnerable and therefore incapable of harm, we argue, leads to significant issues through: damaging staff ability to emotionally regulate; coercing patients into an asymmetrical openness leading to aggression to restore status; damaging therapeutic relationships by enforcing separation between staff and patients; increasing staff's reliance on unhelpful and rigid techniques (such as de-escalation); repressing staffs' ability to learn and grow through encounters with patients. Finally, we offer recommendations for how vulnerability and openness could be cultivated as a relational and radical practice in spaces that are traditionally closed and hostile to it.

在封闭的地方敞开心扉:精神病住院环境中的脆弱性与暴力。
精神科住院环境中暴力和冲突频发,给患者和医护人员都造成了一系列心理和身体伤害。本文借鉴哲学文献中对脆弱性的批判,认为员工对其与患者关系的理解(包括他们应该如何应对暴力和冲突)是建立在对脆弱性的主流、还原性解释之上的。这种观点将脆弱性定义为更容易受到伤害,因此认为 "无懈可击 "的工作人员有责任保护和管理易受伤害的病人。我们提出了另一种观点,即脆弱性是一种开放性和被改变的能力,它揭示了常见的脆弱性观点是如何被用来证明工作人员对病人的强制权力和控制工作人员的行为是合理的。我们的主要论点是,工作人员采用这种消极的方法来看待脆弱性,与这些环境中普遍存在的暴力和冲突等一系列因素有关。我们认为,工作人员需要将自己定位为无懈可击,因而不会造成伤害的人,这导致了以下重大问题:损害工作人员的情绪调节能力;强迫病人采取不对称的开放态度,从而导致攻击行为,以恢复地位;强制隔离工作人员与病人,破坏治疗关系;增加工作人员对无益和僵化技术(如降级)的依赖;压制工作人员通过与病人接触来学习和成长的能力。最后,我们就如何在传统上封闭和敌视脆弱性和开放性的空间中培养脆弱性和开放性作为一种关系和激进的做法提出了建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
39
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nursing Philosophy provides a forum for discussion of philosophical issues in nursing. These focus on questions relating to the nature of nursing and to the phenomena of key relevance to it. For example, any understanding of what nursing is presupposes some conception of just what nurses are trying to do when they nurse. But what are the ends of nursing? Are they to promote health, prevent disease, promote well-being, enhance autonomy, relieve suffering, or some combination of these? How are these ends are to be met? What kind of knowledge is needed in order to nurse? Practical, theoretical, aesthetic, moral, political, ''intuitive'' or some other? Papers that explore other aspects of philosophical enquiry and analysis of relevance to nursing (and any other healthcare or social care activity) are also welcome and might include, but not be limited to, critical discussions of the work of nurse theorists who have advanced philosophical claims (e.g., Benner, Benner and Wrubel, Carper, Schrok, Watson, Parse and so on) as well as critical engagement with philosophers (e.g., Heidegger, Husserl, Kuhn, Polanyi, Taylor, MacIntyre and so on) whose work informs health care in general and nursing in particular.
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