A Quality Improvement Project to Reduce Events of Visitor Escalation in the Intensive Care Nursery

Supplemental Digital Content is Available in the Text. Background: Escalating and aggressive visitor behaviors have become increasingly common in healthcare settings nationally, negatively impacting staff and patients alike. Most healthcare providers do not innately possess the specific skills to manage such behaviors. Management of escalating and aggressive behaviors presents a particularly bedeviling challenge when staff safety must be balanced with the needs of parent–neonate bonding. Purpose: In the Intensive Care Nursery (ICN), the frequency of aggressive and hostile incidents from visitors increased such that the staff felt frustrated by and uneasy about their work environment. Methods: The ICN convened an interprofessional team to strategize interventions aimed at consistently managing aggressive behavior and supporting the staff after aggressive and/or hostile visitor encounters. Findings: Following staff education and training, the unit launched a de-escalation management algorithm in July 2018 that assisted in identifying high-risk families at admission and drove consistent action and management of all visitor behaviors. In the 12 months following the intervention, the frequency of behavioral escalation decreased by 75% and staff perception of safety increased by 25%. Implications for Practice: Collaborating with staff to design consistent strategies to manage aggressive and escalating visitor behavior can improve safety and improve employee satisfaction in the ICN. Implications for Research: Additional research on the effectiveness of the algorithm in other ICNs and alternative areas of practice is needed. Furthermore, validation of a staff perception survey measuring the impact of escalating visitor behaviors on employees would be an important next step in this research. Video abstract available at https://journals.lww.com/advancesinneonatalcare/Pages/videogallery.aspx?autoPlay=false&videoId=43

[1]  P. Bee,et al.  Patient perspectives on barriers and enablers to the use and effectiveness of de‐escalation techniques for the management of violence and aggression in mental health settings , 2018, Journal of advanced nursing.

[2]  G. Kok,et al.  Nurse managers: Determinants and behaviours in relation to patient and visitor aggression in general hospitals. A qualitative study , 2017, Journal of advanced nursing.

[3]  P. Feder-Bubis,et al.  Violence against physicians and nurses in a hospital: How does it happen? A mixed-methods study , 2017, Israel Journal of Health Policy Research.

[4]  S. Hall,et al.  Trauma-informed care in the newborn intensive care unit: promoting safety, security and connectedness , 2017, Journal of Perinatology.

[5]  G. Lasiuk,et al.  Scoping Review of the Mental Health of Parents of Infants in the NICU , 2017, Journal of obstetric, gynecologic, and neonatal nursing : JOGNN.

[6]  B. Lee,et al.  Incorporating Relationship-Based Care Into a Nurse Education Program for Managing Disruptive Patient Behaviors , 2017, Clinical nurse specialist CNS.

[7]  Peter A. Bamberger,et al.  Rudeness and Medical Team Performance , 2017, Pediatrics.

[8]  R. Halfens,et al.  The participant's perspective: learning from an aggression management training course for nurses. Insights from a qualitative interview study. , 2016, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[9]  P. Bieling,et al.  Effective ingredients of verbal de-escalation: validating an English modified version of the 'De-Escalating Aggressive Behaviour Scale'. , 2016, Journal of psychiatric and mental health nursing.

[10]  S. Spencer,et al.  De‐escalation techniques for managing aggression , 2016 .

[11]  M. Azeem,et al.  Restraint Reduction at a Pediatric Psychiatric Hospital: A Ten-Year Journey. , 2015, Journal of child and adolescent psychiatric nursing : official publication of the Association of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nurses, Inc.

[12]  G. Dickens,et al.  De-escalation: A survey of clinical staff in a secure mental health inpatient service. , 2015, International journal of mental health nursing.

[13]  Debra Smith,et al.  A qualitative investigation into nurses' perceptions of factors influencing staff injuries sustained during physical interventions employed in response to service user violence within one secure learning disability service. , 2015, Journal of clinical nursing.

[14]  Raymond Francis Sarmiento,et al.  Occupational Traumatic Injuries Among Workers in Health Care Facilities — United States, 2012–2014 , 2015, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[15]  G. Kok,et al.  Risk factors associated with patient and visitor violence in general hospitals: results of a multiple regression analysis. , 2013, International journal of nursing studies.

[16]  S. Zeller,et al.  Overview of Project BETA: Best practices in Evaluation and Treatment of Agitation , 2012, The western journal of emergency medicine.

[17]  J. Peteet,et al.  Possibly impossible patients: management of difficult behavior in oncology outpatients. , 2011, Journal of oncology practice.

[18]  Susan Phillips,et al.  Countering Workplace Aggression: An Urban Tertiary Care Institutional Exemplar , 2007, Nursing administration quarterly.

[19]  K. Dyer Identifying, Understanding, and Working with Grieving Parents in the NICU, Part I: Identifying and Understanding Loss and the Grief Response , 2005, Neonatal Network.

[20]  J. McGrath,et al.  Building Relationships with Families in the NICU: Exploring the Guarded Alliance , 2001, The Journal of perinatal & neonatal nursing.

[21]  T. Griffin Angry Families in the NICU , 2001, Neonatal Network.

[22]  P. Bee,et al.  The support-control continuum: An investigation of staff perspectives on factors influencing the success or failure of de-escalation techniques for the management of violence and aggression in mental health settings. , 2018, International journal of nursing studies.

[23]  J. Janisse,et al.  Preventing Patient-to-Worker Violence in Hospitals: Outcome of a Randomized Controlled Intervention , 2017, Journal of occupational and environmental medicine.

[24]  A. Hildenbrand,et al.  Implementing a Trauma-Informed Approach in Pediatric Health Care Networks. , 2016, JAMA pediatrics.

[25]  A. Kazak,et al.  Systematic Review: A Reevaluation and Update of the Integrative (Trajectory) Model of Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress. , 2016, Journal of pediatric psychology.

[26]  M. J. Peebles-kleiger Pediatric and neonatal intensive care hospitalization as traumatic stressor: implications for intervention. , 2000, Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic.