Improving the culture of safety on a high-acuity inpatient child/adolescent psychiatric unit by mindfulness-based stress reduction training of staff.

J Child Adolesc Psychiatr Nurs

Vice-President-Care Continuum, St. John-Providence Health System, Southfield, Michigan, USA.

Published: November 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to reduce stress levels among staff and enhance safety in a high-acuity psychiatric unit by implementing an 8-day mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) training program.
  • Staff stress and safety were measured using the Toronto Mindfulness Scale and the Perceived Stress Scale immediately after training and at a follow-up 2 months later.
  • Results showed that the MBSR program successfully lowered staff stress, increased mindfulness, and indicated improvements in safety, as seen through reduced staff call-ins and restraint use.

Article Abstract

Problem: The purpose of this study was to reduce perceived levels of interprofessional staff stress and to improve patient and staff safety by implementing a brief mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) training program on a highacuity psychiatric inpatient unit.

Methods: A one-group repeated measure design was utilized to measure the impact of the (MBSR) training program on staff stress and safety immediately posttraining and at 2 months. Two instruments were utilized in the study: the Toronto Mindfulness Scale and the Perceived Stress Scale.

Findings: The MBSR program reduced staff stress across the 2-month post-training period and increased staff mindfulness immediately following the brief training period of 8 days, and across the 2-month post-training period. A trend toward positive impact on patient and staff safety was also seen in a decreased number of staff call-ins, decreased need for 1:1 staffing episodes, and decreased restraint use 2 months following the training period.

Conclusions: A brief MBSR training program offered to an interprofessional staff of a high-acuity inpatient adolescent psychiatric unit was effective in decreasing their stress, increasing their mindfulness, and improving staff and patient safety.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcap.12191DOI Listing

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