Feature

Toward a new open-door model for psychiatric wards


 

If isolated, patients with mental disorders may end up having higher levels of social impairment. This has led several hospitals in Spain to set up open-door departments that are more accessible.

The purpose of the open-door model is to help remove the stigma from individuals who need to be admitted to a psychiatric ward because they have a mental disorder.

Traditional locked wards

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2019, one in every eight people were living with a mental disorder. Having the least restrictive type of mental health care is one of the 10 basic principles listed in a 1996 reference document from the WHO.

Among people suffering from severe psychiatric disorders, there is a high probability of being involuntarily admitted to a psychiatry ward with locked doors (PWLD). Admission to a PWLD involves the application of a set of measures that restrict the individual’s freedom.

The main argument for keeping the doors locked is that it prevents suicides and self-harm behavior, as well as abscondment. But in recent years, efforts have been made to apply a model called open-door policy psychiatry wards (ODPWs).

Open wards model

Experiments were undertaken in various countries, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Switzerland, and Germany. Investigators found that the new forms of hospitalization led to a reduction in conflictive events; self-harm behavior; restrictive measures, such as seclusion, mechanical restraints, and chemical restraints; as well as forced medication. On the basis of these findings, ODPWs were launched.

According to Ignacio García Cabeza, MD, psychiatrist and coordinator of the department of psychiatry at Gregorio Marañón General University Hospital in Madrid, “The open wards model is founded on the idea of respecting the patient and their autonomy. In addition, it advocates a reduction in coercive measures.

“We wanted our department to be the same as the other departments in the hospital, with patients going in and out, receiving treatment, and being able to have family visits,” he explained. “A patient’s diagnosis should not factor into these things. People with schizophrenia, people with any type of mental disorder, should be able to enjoy this minimally restrictive environment.”

Use of open wards constitutes a paradigm shift in hospitalization toward a person-centered psychiatry. The goal of this new paradigm is to prepare the individual so that he or she can live in harmony with the usual environment and participate in it to the same extent as everyone else in the community.

This model also implies fundamental changes in the interaction between health care professionals and patients. The implementation of new nursing care models, among which the Safewards model stands out, is a key element for the success of the project.

Based on a set of tools for preventing and managing conflict, the Safewards model seeks to modify the factors that regulate the relationship between staff and patients. Use of this model brought about a 15% reduction in the rate of conflictive events and a 23% reduction in the rate of coercive interventions, in comparison with a control group.

One of the major debates is about whether every patient should be able to choose this open-door system. For Dr. García Cabeza, the answer is yes, but with one caveat. “There’s a certain group of patients who perhaps need to be in locked wards, who perhaps require greater means of control – patients whose conditions put them at a high risk of suicide or of self-harm behavior or of absconding.”

He had no hesitation in saying that an open-door ward increases the patient’s self-esteem. It helps promote autonomy and a sense of control and of normalcy with respect to a community. “The idea is to get to the point where we’ve got an atmosphere, a climate, that serves to benefit the therapeutic actions that are going to continue to influence the patient’s future progress and their treatment.”

That’s why it’s important to bring about the kind of health care activities that can prevent the patient from experiencing some of the negative psychological effects, such as distrust and feeling removed from normalcy. “In traditional locked wards, the patient feels incapable of making decisions. They feel that they have very little to do with [and have] no say in the decisions made, and a lot of times, this leads to a situation where, after discharge, the patient ends up giving up on the treatments. If we can manage to break this perception held by the patient,” Dr. García Cabeza suggested, “it’s quite likely that we’ll manage to improve the course of their disorder in general.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Early metformin minimizes antipsychotic-induced weight gain
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA panel rejects pimavanserin for Alzheimer’s psychosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Advance directives for psychiatric care reduce compulsory admissions
MDedge Internal Medicine
U.K. survey: Dermatologists want training in prescribing antipsychotics for delusional infestation
MDedge Internal Medicine
Telemental health linked with improvements in key outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Does schizophrenia need a name change?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sexual assault flagged as a possible psychosis trigger
MDedge Internal Medicine
Mixed results for intensive home care for psychiatric crises
MDedge Internal Medicine
Positive phase 3 results for novel schizophrenia drug
MDedge Internal Medicine
Subtle visual dysfunctions often precede early-stage psychosis
MDedge Internal Medicine