Abstract

In a meta-analysis of international studies, 17% of admitted patients in psychiatric hospitals had exhibited violent behavior toward others. Reported data from studies in Germany were considerably lower until recent years. However, studies examining only single hospitals, as well as the quality of the data itself, have raised questions as to the validity of these findings. Indeed, a debate currently exists as to whether there has, in fact, been an increase of violent incidents in German mental institutions. In a group of 10 hospitals serving about half the population of the Federal State of Baden-Wuerttemberg with 11 million inhabitants, the Staff Observation Aggression Scale-Revised (SOAS-R) was introduced into patients' electronic charts as part of routine documentation. Data recording was strongly supported by staff councils and unions. A completed data set is now available for the year 2019. For one hospital, data are available since 2006. Due to some doubts with respect to fully covering self-directed aggression, we restricted the analysis to aggression toward others and toward objects. In 2019, 17,599 aggressive incidents were recorded in 64,367 admissions (1,660 staying forensic psychiatric inpatients included). 5,084 (7.90%) of the admitted cases showed aggressive behavior toward others. Variation between hospitals was low to modest (SD = 1.50). The mean SOAS-R score was 11.8 (SD between hospitals 1.20%). 23% of the incidents resulted in bodily harm. The percentage of patients showing violent behavior was highest among patients with organic disorders (ICD-10 F0) and lowest among patients with addictive or affective disorders (F1, F3, F4). Forensic psychiatry had the highest proportion of cases with aggressive behavior (20.54%), but the number of incidents per bed was lower than in general adult psychiatry and child and adolescent psychiatry (indicating a lower risk for staff). In the hospital with longer-term recordings available, an increase could be observed since 2010, with considerable variation between years. This is the most robust estimate of the frequency of violent incidents in German psychiatric hospitals thus far. The incidence is about half of what has been reported internationally, probably due to sample selection bias in previous studies and a relatively high number of hospital beds in Germany. Available data suggest an increase of violent incidents over the last ten years; however, it is unclear to which extent this is due to increased reporting.

Highlights

  • In a meta-analysis of international studies, 17% of admitted patients in psychiatric hospitals had exhibited violent behavior toward others

  • The incidence is about half of what has been reported internationally, probably due to sample selection bias in previous studies and a relatively high number of hospital beds in Germany

  • Available data suggest an increase of violent incidents over the last ten years; it is unclear to which extent this is due to increased reporting

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Summary

Methods

In a group of hospitals serving about half the population of the Federal State of BadenWuerttemberg with million inhabitants, the Staff Observation Aggression Scale–Revised (SOAS-R) was introduced into patients’ electronic charts as part of routine documentation. The Centers for Psychiatry (ZfP Group Baden-Wuerttemberg) comprise 9 psychiatric hospitals, each of which has several satellite centers, for a total of 38 sites They provide 3,494 beds for inpatient treatment and 612 places in day clinics, as well as 997 places in 8 clinics for forensic psychiatry. Our data set includes data from another hospital in which one of the centers holds shares This hospital provides 127 beds for inpatient treatment and 85 places in day clinics and employs a total of 304 persons. The hospitals serve defined catchment areas and are responsible for the inpatient mental health care of about half the population of the Federal State of Baden-Wuerttemberg (with million inhabitants) and all the State’s forensic hospital beds. As the legal conditions of hospital staffing and availability of hospital beds are more or less the same within the whole federal state, the sample can be considered as approximately representative of the state in totality

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