Systemic Perspective of Violence and Aggression in Mental Health Care: Towards a More Comprehensive Understanding and Conceptualization: Part 1
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2013
Abstract
Aggression and violence (A/V) in mental health care are all too frequent occurrences; they produce a wide range of deleterious impacts on the individual client, staff, organizations, and the broader community. A/V is a multifaceted and highly-complex problem, and is associated empirically with a wide range of phenomena. However, most attempts to reduce A/V in mental health care have invariably focused on one or two aspects of the problem at the expense of a more comprehensive, systemic approach; these have produced inconclusive results. As a result, this two-part paper seeks to: (i) recognize the wide range of phenomena that have been found to have an association with A/V in mental health care; (ii) synthesize these propositions according to fit or congruence into a systemic model of A/V; (iii) explore empirical evidence pertaining to these propositions; and (iv) begin to consider the application of this model to better inform our individual and/or organizational responses to A/V in mental health care. The paper advances a systemic model of these phenomena comprised of four thematic categories, with Part 1 of this paper focusing on the first two categories: environmental and intrapersonal (client-related) phenomena.
Repository Citation
Cutcliffe, J. R.,
& Riahi, S.
(2013). Systemic Perspective of Violence and Aggression in Mental Health Care: Towards a More Comprehensive Understanding and Conceptualization: Part 1. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 22 (6), 558-567.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/nursing_faculty/40
DOI
10.1111/inm.12029
Comments
To acquire a personal use copy of this work, contact John Cutcliffe at john.cutcliffe@wright.edu.