Feature

Toward a new open-door model for psychiatric wards


 

What the literature says

The effect of ODPW has been investigated through comparative studies with PWLD and research of the transition from PWLD to ODPW, both from a therapeutic and safety a point of view.

A 15-year observational study published in The Lancet Psychiatry found that, with respect to abscondment, suicide attempts, and suicide, there were no significant differences between hospitals with open-door policies and those without.

A subsequent study that was published in 2017 found that on open wards, any aggressive behavior and restraint or seclusion were less likely than on closed wards.

The Spanish situation

This system is already at work in some Spanish hospitals, among them Inca Comarcal Hospital (Palma de Mallorca), Elda General University Hospital (Alicante), Germans Trias i Pujol Hospital in Badalona, and Gregorio Marañón General University Hospital in Madrid.

“At Gregorio Marañón, we started the experiment just before the pandemic hit. We’re up and running now, but still with some limitations; the patient can go in and out, but not with the flexibility we’d like,” explained Dr. García Cabeza. “An open ward plays a clinical, patient-care role and a symbolic one as well. Locking the doors has a lot to do with the fear felt toward these patients. It’s a stigma that they’ve had to deal with and that they continue to have to deal with. In terms of the symbolic role, there’s also the fear that comes with giving these patients some rights.”

While the experiment at Gregorio Marañón’s psychiatric ward “is still very much in the early stages,” there have been no recorded incidents related to its open-door policy. Dr. García Cabeza is aware of the challenges of such a policy, “starting with assistance when conflictive events arise. Challenges faced by the staff – especially the nursing staff, as they’re the ones who are with the patients 24 hours day – and challenges faced by those in charge of providing care. In all of this, there are new things to learn and be aware of, new ways of understanding and looking at the patient-physician relationship. The fears are still there – they haven’t been done away with. But the way we conduct ourselves should be adjusted, matching how we act toward other patients. Although the differences have to be taken into account, we have to try to normalize, as much as possible, the environment where patients with mental disorders receive treatment.”

Dr. García Cabeza has no doubts. “The most sensible and reasonable decisions need to be made at these sites so as to allow the broadest applicability to cases. Anyone who needs psychiatric hospitalization and who is competent to consent to admission and who voluntarily agrees to be admitted – they can and must be placed in an open ward.”

The hope is that in the future, the number of open wards will increase and the number of locked wards – which have more stigma attached to them – will go down. The involvement of the staff and appropriate institutional support are essential to making this a reality.

This article was translated from Univadis Spain.

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