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An evidence-based de-escalation training program was tied to fewer restraints and conflict events

Health Technology Assessment, NIHR (PubMed)Jan 1, 2024

AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.

Brief summary

A co-designed de-escalation training program (EDITION) was associated with fewer conflict events and less use of restraint and seclusion in a feasibility evaluation.

What NurseJet pulled from the source

Researchers reviewed the evidence on de-escalation, then tested the EDITION training across ten adult acute and forensic mental health wards, training more than 270 staff. Over 24 weeks, conflict events such as violence and self-harm and the use of containment both decreased across study phases, with no adverse events linked to the intervention. The authors call this a feasibility signal, not proof, because the design was uncontrolled.

Why this matters for nurses

Restraint and seclusion harm patients and staff, and de-escalation is the first-line alternative behavioral-health nurses use every shift. This may matter for nurses because it offers an evidence-informed training model and an early signal that structured de-escalation, reflective practice, and environmental changes can reduce both conflict and restrictive interventions.

Bedside takeaway

Be aware that a co-designed de-escalation training program was tied to fewer conflict events and less restraint and seclusion, though the uncontrolled design makes this a feasibility signal, not proof.

Explain this for my unit

Key takeaways

  • EDITION was a co-designed de-escalation program tested on ten wards with more than 270 staff.
  • Conflict events and containment use both fell across the study phases.
  • No adverse events were linked to the intervention.
  • The authors describe this as a feasibility signal pending a controlled trial.

Practice implications

  • Lean on structured de-escalation, establishing safety, listening to the patient's concern, and conveying respect, before considering restraint or seclusion, use post-incident debriefing to learn from conflict events, and address environmental stressors such as noise and crowding.

Limitations & cautions

  • The trial used an uncontrolled before-and-after design with a self-selecting sample, so effectiveness is not proven. Results are a feasibility signal pending a definitive controlled trial.
  • AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.

Citations

Exact source links

Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.

Health Technology Assessment, NIHR (PubMed)

Health Technology Assessment, NIHR (PubMed). Development and evaluation of a de-escalation training intervention in adult acute and forensic units: the EDITION systematic review and feasibility trial.

Open original source

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38343036/

Professional education only

This summary does not replace clinical judgment, facility policy, provider orders, or official guidelines. Verify practice changes against the original source and local protocol.

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