Reducing Physical Restraint Use in the Medical Behavioral Unit

Author:

Dalton Evan M.1,Raymond Kathleen2,Kovacs Brian2,Vespe Kristin3,Kaufmann Virginia3,Lasoski Matthew3,Gunnison Claire4,Beauchamps Julie4,Kane Emily56,Andrade Gabriela36

Affiliation:

1. aDepartment of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas

2. Departments of bNursing

3. cChild and Adolescent Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

4. dCenter for Healthcare Quality and Analytics

5. ePediatrics, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

6. fUniversity of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Children with behavioral health conditions often experience agitation when admitted to children’s hospitals. Physical restraint should be used only as a last resort for patient agitation because it endangers the physical and psychological safety of patients and employees. At the medical behavioral unit (MBU) in our children’s hospital, we aimed to decrease the weekly rate of physical restraint events per 100 MBU patient-days, independent of patient race, ethnicity, or language, from a baseline mean of 14.0 to <10 within 12 months. METHODS Using quality improvement methodology, a multidisciplinary team designed, tested, and implemented interventions including a series of daily deescalation huddles led by a charge behavioral health clinician that facilitated individualized planning for MBU patients with the highest behavioral acuity. We tracked the weekly number of physical restraint events per 100 MBU patient-days as a primary outcome measure, weekly physical restraint event duration as a secondary outcome measure, and MBU employee injuries as a balancing measure. RESULTS Our cohort included 527 consecutive patients hospitalized in the MBU between January 2021 and January 2023. Our 2021 baseline mean of 14.0 weekly physical restraint events per 100 MBU patient-days decreased to 10.0 during our 2022 intervention period from January through July and 4.1 in August, which was sustained through December. Weekly physical restraint event duration also decreased from 112 to 67 minutes without a change in employee injuries. CONCLUSIONS Multidisciplinary huddles that facilitated daily deescalation planning safely reduced the frequency and duration of physical restraint events in the MBU.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

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