Abstract

BackgroundInfluence of architectural features in child and adolescent psychiatric wards on coercive measure use has not been investigated so far. We aimed to assess the effect of altering the physical environment of an adolescent psychiatric inpatient unit on the proportion and frequency of adolescents experiencing mechanical coercive measures.MethodIn a naturalistic observational design, coercive measures were compared before and after an architectural intervention facilitated by rebuilding a child and adolescent psychiatric department in October 2020. Age, gender, length of stay, main psychiatric diagnosis and indices of coercion in n = 782 admissions to inpatient child and adolescent psychiatry from April 2019 to April 2022 were extracted. Group comparisons were performed using chi‐squared tests for categorical and Mann–Whitney U‐tests for numerical variables.ResultsAfter structural modernization which included amplifying space and with the newly introduced availability of seclusion rooms, significantly fewer patients were affected by mechanical restraint (8.1% vs. 13.7%, p = .013). Rate of seclusion increased to 5.0% (vs. 0%, p < .001). Rate of seclusion and/or restraint decreased from 13.7% to 11.8% (p = .425). The median cumulative duration of all coercive measures per affected case decreased significantly (2.8 vs. 5.4 h, p = .005), as well as its proportion to length of stay (0.8% vs. 2.8%, p = .006).ConclusionsModernisation and restructuring of buildings hosting psychiatric departments can contribute to a reduction of coercive measures in child and adolescent psychiatric units.

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