通过使用短期风险评估和可治疗性的关键因素作为关怀工具来降低法医精神病患者未来暴力的风险。

Journal of forensic nursing Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-02 DOI:10.1097/JFN.0000000000000464
Charlotte Pollak, Tom Palmstierna
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:司法精神卫生保健的双重任务是社区保护和治疗精神障碍。短期风险和可治疗性评估(START)已成为法医精神病学风险评估和护理规划的既定工具。当使用START时,判断为关键因素的项目被选择在护理计划中处理。但是,不知道需要处理哪些特别重要的关键因素,以减少今后发生暴力的风险。目的:本研究的主要目的是探讨工作人员在护理计划中对关键因素的选择如何影响未来暴力的风险。方法:该研究基于瑞典斯德哥尔摩县法医精神病学诊所285名被定罪和非自愿住院患者的787项START评估。通过比较患者在选择某一关键因素时的脆弱性总和与下一次评估时的脆弱性总和,来衡量在护理计划中选择某一关键因素对未来暴力风险的影响。结果:结果表明,在护理计划中将“洞察力”、“态度”、“精神状态”、“应对”和“药物使用”作为关键因素时,患者未来发生暴力的总体风险显著降低。特定关键因素的重要性因诊断组和入院后时间而异。结论:当工作人员在护理计划中选择某些特定项目作为关键因素时,患者暴力行为复发的风险显著降低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reducing Risk for Future Violence From Forensic Psychiatric Patients by Using Critical Factors of the Short-Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability as a Caring Tool.

Background: The dual task for forensic mental health care is community protection and treatment of mental disorders. The Short-Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability (START) has become an established tool for risk assessment and care planning in forensic psychiatry. When using the START, items judged as critical factors are chosen to be addressed in the care plan. However, it is not known which critical factors that are of special interest need to be addressed to reduce the risk for future violence.

Aims: The main aim of this study was to explore how staff's choice of critical factors in the care planning influences risk for future violence.

Methods: The study is based on 787 START assessments from 285 convicted and involuntary admitted inpatients at the Forensic Psychiatric Clinic of Stockholm County, Sweden. The influence on risk for future violence by selecting a certain item as a critical factor in the care plan was measured by comparing patients' sum of vulnerabilities at the time this certain critical factor was selected with this sum at the next assessment.

Results: The results show that a patient's overall risk for future violence decreases significantly when the items "insight," "attitudes," "mental state," "coping," and "drug use" were addressed as critical factors in the care planning. The importance of specified critical factors differs between diagnostic groups and time after admission.

Conclusions: When staff select certain specified items as critical factors in the care planning, the patients' risk of relapse into acts of violence was significantly reduced.

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