Abstract

Violence perpetrated by psychiatric inpatients is associated with modifiable factors. Current structured approaches to assess inpatient violence risk lack predictive validity and linkage to interventions. Adult psychiatric inpatients on forensic and general wards in three psychiatric hospitals were recruited and followed up prospectively for 6 months. Information on modifiable (dynamic) risk factors were collected every 1-4 weeks, and baseline background factors. Data were transferred to a web-based monitoring system (FOxWeb) to calculate a total dynamic risk score. Outcomes were extracted from an incident-reporting system recording aggression and interpersonal violence. The association between total dynamic score and violent incidents was assessed by multilevel logistic regression and compared with dynamic score excluded. We recruited 89 patients and conducted 624 separate assessments (median 5/patient). Mean age was 39 (s.d. 12.5) years with 20% (n = 18) female. Common diagnoses were schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (70%, n = 62) and personality disorders (20%, n = 18). There were 93 violent incidents. Factors contributing to violence risk were a total dynamic score of ⩾1 (OR 3.39, 95% CI 1.25-9.20), 10-year increase in age (OR 0.67, 0.47-0.96), and female sex (OR 2.78, 1.04-7.40). Non-significant associations with schizophrenia-spectrum disorder were found (OR 0.50, 0.20-1.21). In a fixed-effect model using all covariates, AUC was 0.77 (0.72-0.82) and 0.75 (0.70-0.80) when the dynamic score was excluded. In predicting violence risk in individuals with psychiatric disorders, modifiable factors added little incremental value beyond static ones in a psychiatric inpatient setting. Future work should make a clear distinction between risk factors that assist in prediction and those linked to needs.

Highlights

  • Violence perpetrated by individuals with psychiatric disorders is common in inpatient settings

  • We describe the development and assessment of a simple, scalable risk monitoring tool for assessing violence risk in psychiatric inpatients in forensic and general adult wards and assess the incremental value of dynamic risk factors in this tool’s predictive performance

  • Modifiable or dynamic risk factors with the strongest association with risk of violence were identified from a systematic review of violence in psychosis involving 110 studies and 45 533 individuals (Witt, van Dorn, & Fazel, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

Violence perpetrated by individuals with psychiatric disorders is common in inpatient settings. To complement and assist clinical decision-making, the use of structured tools and instruments have increasingly been advocated to improve risk assessment They have been implemented in secure psychiatric settings, and in some more general adult inpatient units. Certain national guidelines have recommended the use of imminent tools (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, 2015) Both BVC and DASA are based on one-off assessments of risk factors, use paper forms, and only predict risk over the very short-term (i.e. the 24 h). In predicting violence risk in individuals with psychiatric disorders, modifiable factors added little incremental value beyond static ones in a psychiatric inpatient setting. Future work should make a clear distinction between risk factors that assist in prediction and those linked to needs

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