Abstract

IntroductionAgitation is common in the emergency department. When agitation is not detected early, patients can become aggressive and violent, potentially leading to restraint use and subsequent injury. The goals of the project were early detection and management of patient agitation, reduction of restraint use in the emergency department, and determination of the usability of the Behavioral Activity Rating Scale. MethodsThis quality improvement project was assessed using a pre- and posttest single unit design, comparing 4 months of postimplementation data to historic controls at the same time of year in the previous year. The intervention was implementing the Behavioral Activity Rating Scale in the ED electronic medical record. Data were collected through retrospective chart review and nurse survey. From September through December of both 2017 and 2018, data were collected on restraint use. The 4-month 2018 data collection period included measures of Behavioral Activity Rating Scale documentation and the System Usability Scale survey for nurses to measure ease of usability of the Behavioral Activity Rating Scale. ResultsThe Behavioral Activity Rating Scale was documented frequently (n = 4 867 documentations) by emergency nurses to assess patients with behavioral health and medical complaints (n = 780). Nurses identified 18 episodes of violent behavior in behavioral health patients on the Behavioral Activity Rating Scale (2.31%) and applied restraints 18 times. The most common chief complaints for patients who were identified as violent was suicidal ideation (n = 6; 33.33%).In 2017, there were 20 episodes of restraint use during the same time period, a nonsignificant difference (χ2 = 0.72; P = 0.40). However, only 2 patients were kept in restraints longer than 1 day in 2018 compared with 8 in 2017. Emergency nurses found the Behavioral Activity Rating Scale to be usable in the structured usability assessment (μ = 83.46; SD = 11.73). DiscussionThe Behavioral Activity Rating Scale is a usable tool for emergency nurses to assess for patient agitation. With the incorporation of agitation management interventions, the ED team can potentially manage agitation before violence occurs. Further studies are needed on the use of agitation or aggression assessment tools for managing patient behavioral activity such as aggression in the emergency department.

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